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Nature of the Machine and the Collapse of Cybernetics: A Transhumanist Lesson for Emerging Technologies 1st ed. 2017 [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 299 pages, kõrgus x laius: 210x148 mm, kaal: 5005 g, 3 Illustrations, black and white; VII, 299 p. 3 illus., 1 Hardback
  • Sari: Palgrave Studies in the Future of Humanity and its Successors
  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-Jul-2017
  • Kirjastus: Springer International Publishing AG
  • ISBN-10: 3319545167
  • ISBN-13: 9783319545165
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 299 pages, kõrgus x laius: 210x148 mm, kaal: 5005 g, 3 Illustrations, black and white; VII, 299 p. 3 illus., 1 Hardback
  • Sari: Palgrave Studies in the Future of Humanity and its Successors
  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-Jul-2017
  • Kirjastus: Springer International Publishing AG
  • ISBN-10: 3319545167
  • ISBN-13: 9783319545165
Teised raamatud teemal:
This book is a philosophical exploration of the theoretical causes behind the collapse of classical cybernetics, as well as the lesson that this episode can provide to current emergent technologies. Alcibiades Malapi-Nelson advances the idea that the cybernetic understanding of the nature of a machine entails ontological and epistemological consequences that created both material and theoretical conundrums. However, he proposes that given our current state of materials research, scientific practices, and research tools, there might be a way for cybernetics to flourish this time.





The book starts with a historical and theoretical articulation of cybernetics in order to proceed with a philosophical explanation of its collapseemphasizing the work of Alan Turing, Ross Ashby and John von Neumann. Subsequently, Malapi-Nelson unveils the common metaphysical signature shared between cybernetics and emergent technologies, identifying this signature as transhumanist in nature. Finally, avenues of research that may allow these disruptive technologies to circumvent the cybernetic fate are indicated. It is proposed that emerging technologies ultimately entail an affirmation of humanity.

Arvustused

Anyone interested and involved in pervasive computation and ubiquitous machine learning will find this book makes stimulating reading. (J.J. Ramsden, Journal of Biological Physics and Chemistry, Vol. 21, 2021) Cybernetics, an approach for understanding control and communication in a very general way that applies to both machines and living systems, thrived as a movement for about a decade after WW II. This is a technical scholarly work with ample primary source citations . Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty and professionals. (D. Bantz, Choice, Vol. 56 (1), September, 2018)

Muu info

"The Nature of a Machine and the Collapse of Cybernetics exemplifies how critical philosophy of science should be done in our times. Malapi-Nelson conducts a close forensic examination of why cybernetics -- perhaps the twentieth century's most visionary science-based worldview - failed to live up to its ambitions. His diagnosis points to neither a failure of imagination or technology. Rather the culprit lay in a fundamental metaphysical ambiguity in the minds of the field's founders: Is the cybernetic machine supposed to be a concrete model or an ideal object? As Malapi-Nelson astutely observes, a similar ambiguity faces transhumanism's appeal to 'Humanity 2.0' today. This point makes the book essential reading to anyone interested in advancing a conceptually coherent vision of human enhancement." (Steve Fuller, Auguste Comte Professor of Social Epistemology, University of Warwick, author of "Humanity 2.0") "Cybernetics had a meteoric rise with even greater promise when it took part in the Macy Conferences, with brilliant and famous participants, before suddenly and mysteriously imploding. Like a detective story, this book investigates the true culprit bringing about its sudden and unexpected end. And the unexpected culprit turns out to be... well, I strongly recommend that you read this well researched book to find out."(Jagdish Hattiangadi, Professor of Philosophy and Science & Technology studies, York University, Canada) "This work is of great interest to philosophers, students of technological history and anyone interested in the future of humanity's relationship to new technological development. Cybernetics rose and fell quickly. Malapi-Nelson neatly ties this history to current trends in the "transhumanist" movement, and sets some possibilities for what might be, and, importantly, what might become dead ends." (Dan McArthur, Professor of Philosophy, York University, Canada) "Alcibiades Malapi-Nelson offers an informed and engaging philosophical history of the cybernetics movement. By bringing together intellectual history and the philosophy of technology, he elucidates "the nature of machine" at the heart of cybernetics and subsequent transhumanist thought." (Michael Pettit, Professor of Psychology, York University, Canada)
1 Introduction
1(4)
2 Cybernetics: The Beginnings, the Founding Articles and the First Meetings
5(42)
The Problem of Anti-Aircraft Weaponry
5(4)
The AA-Predictor
9(15)
The Pre-Meetings and Founding Articles
24(9)
The Macy Conferences
33(14)
3 Cybernetics The Book, the Club, and the Decline
47(34)
Norbert Wiener's Cybernetics
47(9)
The Ratio Club
56(5)
The Decline
61(6)
Traditional Explanations for the Collapse of Cybernetics
67(14)
4 Pre-Cybernetic Context: An Early Twentieth-Century Ontological Displacement of the Machine
81(32)
The "Foundational Crisis of Mathematics" and the Response from Formalism
81(8)
A Machinal Understanding of an Algorithm and the Material Liberation of the Machine
89(9)
Alan Turing's Strange Reversal regarding the Question of Artificial Intelligence
98(8)
Cybernetics as a Possible Missing Link regarding Turing's Change of Heart
106(7)
5 Cybernetic Tenets: Philosophical Considerations
113(26)
Pinning Down the Core of Cybernetics
113(9)
Machines Can Be Teleological
122(8)
Machines Can Be Immaterial
130(3)
Machines are Embodied Theories
133(6)
6 Extending the Scope of a Machine Ontology
139(32)
William Ross Ashby's Nature-Machine Equalization
139(9)
The Homeostat: A Living Machine
148(4)
The Macy Presentation: Keeping Cybernetics Honest
152(5)
The Backlash: Unforeseen Consequences of a Behavior-Based Ontology
157(7)
Un-Cybernetic DAMS: from Behavior into Structure
164(7)
7 Emphasizing the Limits of a Machine Epistemology
171(32)
John Von Neumann's Appropriation of McCulloch and Pitts' Networks
171(5)
The Letter to Wiener: Post Hoc, Ergo Propter Hoc?
176(8)
The Hixon Symposium: Strengths and Weaknesses of the McCulloch and Pitts' Networks
184(7)
The Illinois Lectures and the Kinematic Model: Cybernetic Materialization of a Theory
191(7)
The Theory of Automata: from Embodiment to Abstraction
198(5)
8 Cybernetic Tensions: Anatomy of a Collapse
203(14)
The Irrelevancy of Materiality for the Nature of a Machine: From Complexity to Disembodiment
203(5)
Mechanizing Machine-Unfriendly Realms: Surreptitious Metaphysical Commitments Die Hard
208(4)
A Machine's Isomorphism with Highly Complex Entities: The Intractability of an Absolutely Accurate Model
212(5)
9 The Rise of Emerging Technologies
217(32)
Cybernetics 2.0: The Nano-Bio-Info-Cogno Convergence
217(10)
Transhumanism: an Age-Old Grand Project for Humanity's Uplifting
227(10)
Scotian Continuum between the Material and the Immaterial
237(3)
Baconian Subsumption of Nature to the "Mechanical Arts"
240(3)
Viconian Constructability as a Criterion of Truth
243(6)
10 Transhumanist Technologies: New Possibilities for a Cybernetic Worldview
249(16)
Constructability as a Measure of Epistemic Success: Molecular Reordering of Reality
249(4)
Mechanizing Machine-Unfriendly Realms: Blurring the Natural with the Artificial
253(4)
The Relevance of Materiality for the Nature of an Object: Simulation as Scientific Factum
257(8)
11 Concluding Remarks
265(6)
Bibliography 271(20)
Index 291
Alcibiades Malapi-Nelson pursued studies in philosophy in Latin America, French Canada and Toronto, where he obtained a doctorate from York University. He is currently working on the implications of emergent technologies for the future of humanity, particularly in what regards human identity, ethics and policy. He currently teaches at Seneca and Humber colleges, in Toronto.