mind Books
We've found 25 books tagged 'mind' relevant to the field of humanlike conversational artificial intelligence.
Subtitle: |
Today and Tomorrow |
Publisher: |
Taylor and Francis
|
Year: |
2019 |
Order: |
https://virtualhumansbook.blog... |
Summary: Virtual Humans provides a much-needed definition of what constitutes a ‘virtual human’ and places virtual humans within the wider context of Artificial Intelligence development. It explores the technical approaches to creating a virtual human, as well as emergent issues such as embodiment, identity, agency and...
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11585
by Selmer Bringsjord and Michael Zenzen |
Subtitle: |
People Harness Hypercomputation, and More |
Publisher: |
Springer
|
Year: |
2003 |
Order: |
http://www.amazon.com/Supermin... |
Summary: This is the first book-length presentation and defense of a new theory of human and machine cognition, according to which human persons are superminds. Superminds are capable of processing information not only at and below the level of Turing machines (standard computers), but above that...
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11244
by James J. Sheehan and Morton Sosna |
Summary: To the age-old debate over what it means to be human, the relatively new fields of sociobiology and artificial intelligence bring new, if not necessarily compatible, insights. What have these two fields in common? Have they affected the way we define humanity? These and other...
Subtitle: |
Introduction to Cognitive Science |
Publisher: |
The MIT Press
|
Year: |
2005 |
Order: |
http://www.amazon.com/Mind-Int... |
Summary: Cognitive science approaches the study of mind and intelligence from an interdisciplinary perspective, working at the intersection of philosophy, psychology, artificial intelligence, neuroscience, linguistics, and anthropology. With Mind, Paul Thagard offers an introduction to this interdisciplinary field for readers who come to the subject with...
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10987
by Margaret A. Boden |
Subtitle: |
Interdisciplinary Essays |
Publisher: |
The MIT Press
|
Year: |
1989 |
Order: |
http://www.amazon.ca/Artificia... |
Summary: This collection of Margaret Boden’s essays written between 1982 and 1988 focuses on the relevance of artificial intelligence to psychology. With her usual clarity and eye for the key role that each discipline plays in the science of the mind, Boden ties the essays together...
Subtitle: |
Mind-1.1 Programmer's Manual |
Publisher: |
Writers Club Press
|
Year: |
2002 |
Order: |
http://www.iuniverse.com/books... |
Summary: AI4U (artificial intelligence for you) is a snapshot of the author’s Mentifex AI project as if frozen in time in 2002. Since then the AI Mind software in both Forth and JavaScript has advanced considerably and is available free of charge on the Web. The...
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8495
by Francisco J. Varela, Evan Thompson and Eleanor Rosch |
Subtitle: |
Cognitive Science and Human Experience |
Publisher: |
The MIT Press
|
Year: |
1991 |
Order: |
http://www.amazon.com/Embodied... |
Summary: Although the scientific study of the mind has developed rapidly in recent years, it has devoted little attention to human cognition understood as everyday lived experience. The Embodied Mind corrects this imbalance within cognitive science by providing a deep and sophisticated treatment of the spontaneous...
Subtitle: |
Arguments of the Philsophers |
Publisher: |
Routledge
|
Year: |
2009 |
Order: |
http://www.amazon.com/J-L-Aust... |
Summary: A critical survey of the work of one of the great innovative figures of British philosophy - especially in philosophy of language, but also in epistemology and philosophy of mind - from 1945 to his early death in 1960. This book should be of interest...
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6752
by Descartes' Error: Emotion, Reason, and the Human Brain |
Subtitle: |
Emotion, Reason, and the Human Brain |
Publisher: |
Penguin Books Ltd
|
Year: |
2005 |
Order: |
http://www.amazon.com/Descarte... |
Summary: Neurologist Damasio’s refutation of the Cartesian idea of the human mind as separate from bodily processes draws on neurochemistry to support his claim that emotions play a central role in human decision making.
Summary: This now-classic work challenges what Ryle calls philosophy’s “official theory,” the Cartesians “myth” of the separation of mind and matter. Ryle’s linguistic analysis remaps the conceptual geography of mind, not so much solving traditional philosophical problems as dissolving them into the mere consequences of misguided...
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