"The rhetoric of algorithmic neutrality is more alive than ever-why? This volume explores key moments in the historical emergence of algorithmic practices and in the constitution of their credibility and authority since 1500. If algorithms are historicalobjects and their associated meanings and values are situated and contingent-and if we are to push back against rhetorical claims of otherwise-then the genealogical investigation this book offers is essential to understand the power of the algorithm. Thefact that algorithms create the conditions for many of our encounters with social reality contrasts starkly with their relative invisibility. More than other artifacts, algorithms are easily black-boxed. Rather than contingent and modifiable, they are widely seen as obvious and unproblematic-without context and without history. As an antidote, this volume keeps a clear focus on the emergence and continuous reconstitution of algorithmic practices alongside the ascendance of modernity. Its essays highlightthe trajectory of an algorithmic modernity, one characterized by attitudes and practices that are best emblematized by the modernist aesthetic and inhuman efficacy of the algorithm. The volume moves from early modern algorithmic practices, centered on heuristics for arithmetic operations, emphasizing ruptures, shifts, and variations across times and cultures. By the age of Enlightenment, the term algorithm had come to signify any process of systematic calculation that could be carried out mechanically, but its meaning and implications are still distant from those familiar to us . It's in the nineteenth and twentieth century that the meaning of algorithm is sharpened through a new discipline and by adding sets of specific conditions-such as the condition of finiteness-which acquire new and crucial significance in the age of digital computing. Throughout, the connection between algorithms and modernity is one of our central concerns. Through detailed historical reconstructions of specific moments, thinkers, and cultural phenomena over the last five hundred years, these essays lead us to the definitions of algorithm most legible today and to the pervasiveness of both algorithmic procedures and rhetoric. This volume contributes a multi-faceted exploration ofthe genealogies of algorithms, of algorithmic thinking, and of the distinctly modernist faith in algorithms as neutral tools that merely illuminate the natural and social world"--
Algorithms have been transforming human society long before the advent of computing. Yet they continue to exist in relative invisibility despite their presence behind many of our modern social interactions. The rhetoric of algorithmic neutrality is more alive than ever, and algorithms are often depicted as obvious and unproblematic—without context and without history.
Algorithmic Modernity draws together the history of mathematics and intellectual history to convey the enduring global history of the algorithm as a computational tool, epistemic ideal, and rhetorical figure alongside the ascendance of modernity. Through historical reconstructions of relevant thinkers and cultural phenomena over the last five hundred years, this collection of essays reveals how algorithms became the standard method for solving problems from the early inclusion of algorithms in Newton's formation of calculus to their later influence in the New Deal economy. Together, these essays create an informed history for readers interested in the social and cultural implications of today's pervasive digital algorithm.
Featuring experts in mathematics, history, and computing, Algorithmic Modernity presents a multi-faceted exploration of the genealogy of algorithmic thinking in modern times.
Arvustused
Algorithms are both centuries old and central to today's hopes and fears. In this compelling book, ten first-rate historians of science and mathematics trace the genealogy of algorithmic practices and ideas that play a crucial role in the modern world. * Donald MacKenzie, University of Edinburgh *
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vii | |
Introduction |
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1 | (15) |
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1 Algorithm and Demonstration in the Sixteenth-Century Ars Magna |
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16 | (15) |
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2 "Some Call It Arsmetrike, and Some Awgryme": Misprision and Precision in Algorithmic Thinking and Learning in 1543 and Beyond |
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31 | (14) |
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3 The Orderly Universe: How the Calculus Became an Algorithm |
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45 | (20) |
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4 The Algorithmic Enlightenment |
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65 | (27) |
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5 Capitalism by Algorithm: Numbers for the Innumerate in the Eighteenth-and Nineteenth-Century Atlantic World |
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92 | (16) |
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6 Material Mathematics: British Algebra as Algorithmic Mathematics |
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108 | (19) |
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7 "For Computing Is Our Duty": Algorithmic Workers, Servants, and Women at the Harvard Observatory |
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127 | (17) |
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8 Seeds of Control: Sugar Beets, Control Algorithms, and New Deal Data Politics |
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144 | (26) |
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9 Inference Rituals: Algorithms and the History of Statistics |
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170 | (20) |
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10 Decision Trees, Random Forests, and the Genealogy of the Black Box |
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190 | (27) |
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Notes |
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217 | (42) |
Bibliography |
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259 | (28) |
Index |
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287 | |
Morgan G. Ames, PhD, is Assistant Professor of Practice in the School of Information and Associate Director of Research for the Center for Science, Technology, Medicine and Society at the University of California, Berkeley. Dr. Ames researches the ideological origins of inequality in the technology world, with a focus on utopianism, childhood, and learning. Her first book, The Charisma Machine: The Life, Death, and Legacy of One Laptop per Child (MIT Press, 2019), won the 2020 Best Information Science Book Award, the 2020 Sally Hacker Prize, and the 2021 Computer History Museum Prize.
Massimo Mazzotti, PhD, is Thomas M. Siebel Professor of the History of Science and Director of the Center for Science, Technology, Medicine, and Society at the University of California, Berkeley. Dr. Mazzotti has published on the gendering of mathematics, mathematics and religion, Enlightenment science, and the politics of various processes of quantification, standardization, and mechanization. His
current projects explore the political dimension of mathematical reasoning in revolutionary Europe; the intersection of technology, design, and social planning in post-war Italy; and the social life of algorithms.