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Great Philosophical Objections to Artificial Intelligence : The History and Legacy of the AI Wars / Eric Dietrich, Chris Fields, John P. Sullins, Bram Van Heuveln and Robin Zebrowski.

Bloomsbury Collections: Supplementary Textbooks 2026 Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Dietrich, Eric, author.
Fields, Chris, author.
Heuveln, Bram Van, author.
Sullins, John P., author.
Zebrowski, Robin, author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Artificial intelligence--Philosophy.
Artificial intelligence.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (368 pages)
Edition:
2nd ed.
Distribution:
London : Bloomsbury Publishing (UK), 2025.
Place of Publication:
London : Bloomsbury Academic, 2026.
System Details:
text file rdaft
Summary:
An entertaining introduction to the clashes between philosophy and AI over the last 70 years, from claims and counter-claims about the ability to implement consciousness, to arguments about cognitive architecture and ChatGPT. Now updated to include the latest developments in AI, this is an exploration of the most famous philosophical arguments against building a machine with human-level intelligence. The arguments are organized into four central AI wars, showing how the debate that played out between the philosophers, AI scientists and engineers building AI systems. Here is your guide to the major philosophical questions and attacks AI has received throughout its history. Packed with fresh insights and supporting material, this second edition features new content on: - Language Learning Models (LLMs) and the existence of generative AI - Sustainable AI and its ability to regulate our climate - The theoretical, ethical and legislative issues around 'computational creativity' - The uncanny valley effect and its potential consequences for AI Are we on the brink of a new AI War? This introduction is for anyone looking to understand the debates that have shaped the philosophy of AI and the arguments that will define its future. It shows us what AI has been doing since its invention in the 1950s - pointing us back, repeatedly, to the philosophical questions humans have always faced: questions about knowledge, meaning, and how we should behave toward each other and toward the rest of the world.
Contents:
List of Figures Prologue: The AI Wars and Beyond Part I. The AI Wars Introduction The First War: Is AI Even Possible? 1. Gödel and Foundational Objections to AI 2. How Would We Know If a Computer Was Intelligent? The Turing Test is Not the Answer The Second War: Architectures of the Mind 3. How Computer Science Saved the Mind 4. Implementing an Intelligence The Third War: Mental Semantics and Mental Symbols 5. The Strange Case of the Missing Meaning: Can Computers Think About Things? The Fourth War: The Frame Problem: Rationality and Creativity 6. What is Relevant to What?: The Frame Problem Part II. Beyond the AI Wars: Issues for Today Introduction 7. What about Consciousness? 8. Ethical Issues Surrounding AI Applications 9. Could Embodied AIs be Ethical Agents Part III The "New AI": Generative Models Reignite Old Controversies Introduction: Why is the "New AI" Surprising? 10 . Representation and Semantics in Large Language Models 11 . Have LLMs Changed the Debate about Consciousness? 12 Sustainability: the New Ethical Issue Raised by Generative AI Conclusion: Whither the AI Wars? Notes Bibliography Index
ISBN:
1-350-49944-7
OCLC:
1559236985

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