000 04009nam a2200421 a 4500
001 00012288
003 WSP
005 20240731095221.0
007 cr |nu|||unuuu
008 210817s2021 si ob 001 0 eng d
010 _a 2021012146
040 _aWSPC
_beng
_cWSPC
020 _a9789811237287
_q(electronic bk.)
020 _a981123728X
_q(electronic bk.)
020 _z9789811237270
_q(hbk.)
020 _z9811237271
_q(hbk.)
050 4 _aQ335
_b.H637 2021
082 0 4 _a006.3
_223
049 _aMAIN
100 1 _aHolford, W. David.
_9178509
245 1 0 _aHuman enactment of intelligent technologies
_h[electronic resource] :
_btowards mètis and mindfulness /
_cW. David Holford.
260 _aSingapore :
_bWorld Scientific,
_c2021.
300 _a1 online resource (244 p.).
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 0 _aWhat do we mean by artificial "intelligence"? -- The issue of relevance in artificial intelligence -- The relevance of relevance: from mètis to creativity -- Historic underpinnings to our quest for knowledge representations -- Human cognition and behavior: a computational and representational decision-making perspective -- Radical embodied cognitive science and certain irreducible phenomena associated with adaptive expertise (mètis) -- Human mindlessness and technology -- Achieving meaningful human control through mindfulness and creative metaphors -- Relevant conversational processes to avoid "success as the seed of future mindlessness" -- Meaningful human control to ensure responsible socio-technical systems -- A few analogies and metaphors on quantum physics as related to mind, artificial intelligence, language and mètis -- Conclusion: more than just "connecting the dots".
520 _a"This book demystifies what artificial intelligence is, examines its strength and limitations in comparison to what humans are capable of, and investigates the nature of human adaptive expertise across the concept of mètis. It also examines a particular family of mindsets that we as humans have adopted over the ages, namely epistemologies of representational knowledge. These representational perspectives have followed us into numerous fields, including how we perceive and comprehend human cognition - leading to 'with a hammer everything looks like a nail' syndrome. As such, this book presents the alternative phenomenological viewpoint of embodied direct reality within the cognitive sciences in the form of radical embodied cognition and, more importantly, how it allows us to better highlight and comprehend human mètis and its adaptive expertise. We then examine why we collectively continue to enact and perpetuate predominant mindsets of representations across the phenomena of mindlessness. To counter this, we re-visit the practice of individual and collective mindfulness, providing a potential 'beachhead' in our re-appropriation of technology (artificial intelligence) towards achieving the best of both worlds - that is, allowing human creativity and ingenuity to be expressed with artificial intelligence as a tool to help us do just that across meaningful human control. Finally, we conclude by examining current top-of-the-horizon activities and debates regarding quantum physics in relation to the human mind and artificial intelligence and how, once again, representational mindsets need not be the only tool in town."--
_cPublisher's website.
538 _aMode of access: World Wide Web.
538 _aSystem requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader.
650 0 _aArtificial intelligence
_xPhilosophy.
_922756
650 0 _aAutomation
_xHuman factors.
_9178510
650 0 _aCognition.
_923500
650 0 _aReasoning.
_922773
650 0 _aMindfulness (Psychology)
_9178511
650 0 _aPhenomenology.
_9178512
655 0 _aElectronic books.
_93294
856 4 0 _uhttps://www.worldscientific.com/worldscibooks/10.1142/12288#t=toc
_zAccess to full text is restricted to subscribers.
942 _cEBK
999 _c97803
_d97803