First published in 1987, this book provides a stimulating introduction to artificial intelligence (AI)-the science of thinking machines. After a general introduction to AI, including its history …
It seems to me that the ingredients of most theories both in artificial intelligence and in psychology have been on the whole too minute, local, and unstructured to account-either …
What's ubiquitous goes unremarked; nobody listens to the music of the spheres (or to me, for that matter). I think a certain account of concepts is ubiquitous in recent discussions about …
LR Baker - American Philosophical Quarterly, 1981 - JSTOR
THERE are numerous claims against artificial intelligence: computers have no natural interests: they are not properly embodied; they cannot handle ambiguities of various kinds …
N Chomsky - The Journal of Philosophy, 2013 - JSTOR
is an ancient one: What kind of creatures are we? I am not deluded enough to think I can provide a satisfactory answer, but it seems reasonable to believe that in some domains at …
In this volume, originally published in 1970, an attempt is made to examine the more logical aspects of thinking, such as the ability to abstract and the manner in which concepts …
Answering the preceding article by Schank and Wilensky, the authors state that their previous article (EJ 161 384, Cognition, December 1976), suggested that the goals of …
This book aims to reach an understanding of how the mind carries out three sorts of thinking-- deduction, induction, and creation--to consider what goes right and what goes wrong, and to …
Prof. GH_J~. ERT RPLE 1 want to ask two questions. The first question is Why has SO little emerged from the painstaking investigations of psy&ologists in the theory of thinking? The …