Binders book is excellent and if you have any interest in the topic at all then you should definitely read it. It certainly has the potential to become a classic in the tangled field of the histories of mathematics, language, logic, and computer science. . . . In his journey from al-Khwrizm to GPT-3 Binder covers an incredible amount of complex material in a comparatively small number of pages. However, his writing is never cluttered or in any way incomprehensible; it is always clear, lucid, and easy to follow . . . * Renaissance Mathematicus * This book is a tightly packed, erudite contribution to the growing concern in the Humanities with algorithms. * LSE Review of Books * "Language and the Rise of the Algorithm is a timely book. In the last two decades, the notion of an algorithm has turned from an abstract mathematical concept into an opaque predictive machine learning system, while large language models such as GPT-4 are forcing us to revisit the relationship between algorithms and natural language. This book puts such developments into a much-needed context." * Technology and Culture * "This book offers a historical examination of the development of algorithmic expression. Binder brings together the histories of mathematics, computer science, and linguistics . . . This scholarly work with its extensive bibliography should appeal to a wide range of readers with interests encompassing the respective histories of language and computer science. The book should be in all university libraries." * Choice * Language and the Rise of the Algorithm is an original and insightful, not to mention magisterial, work. Jeffrey M. Binders mastery of startlingly diverse sourcesphilosophical, mathematical, and literaryspread over four centuries is enormously impressive. His command of scholarly fields ranging from Renaissance theories of language to modern computer science is both broad and deep, and his knowledge of the lives and thought of dozens of characters, some famous, others less so, is nothing less than encyclopedic. Most critically, however, the books argument is both timely and compelling. In an age when boundaries between human and machine are tested as never before, Binder offers an insightful analysis of the present moment and a powerful narrative of how we got to this point. -- Amir Alexander, University of California, Los Angeles In order to better understandand perhaps transformour understanding of algorithms in the present, Jeffrey M. Binder argues persuasively that we need to reopen historical debates on the relationship between language and symbols. Language and the Rise of the Algorithm is a welcome addition to the history of computing that convincingly demonstrates the line between technical algorithms and their social meanings is, itself, socially constructed. -- Jessica Otis, George Mason University Jeffrey M. Binder has written a wonderful, thought-provoking book on the relationship between theories of language and symbolism in mathematics. Language and the Rise of the Algorithm has much to offer to the digital humanities and media studies, but this important work will also be read and studied with interest by historians of science and technology. -- Alma Steingart, Columbia University