In March 1946, some of the greatest minds of the twentieth century — among them John von Neumann, Norbert Wiener, Warren McCulloch, and Walter Pitts — gathered at the Beekman Hotel in New York City with the aim of constructing a science of mental behavior that would resolve at last the ancient philosophical problem of mind and matter. The legacy of their collaboration is known today as cognitive science. Jean-Pierre Dupuy, one of the principal architects of cognitive science in France, reconstructs the early days of the field here in a provocative and engaging combination of philosophy, science, and historical detective work. He shows us how the ambitious and innovative ideas developed in the wake of that New York meeting prefigured some of the most important developments of late-twentieth-century thought. Many scholars, however, shunned the ideas as crude and resented them for being overpromoted. This rejection, Dupuy reveals, was a tragic mistake and a lost opportunity. As Dupuy explains, the founders of cognitive science — or, as they called it, “cybernetics” — drew passion and energy from two convictions: that the mind operates like a machine and that physical laws explain how nature can appear to have meaning. Armed with these convictions, they laid the foundations not only for cognitive science but also artificial intelligence, and foreshadowed the development of chaos theory, complexity theory, and a variety of other major scientific and philosophical breakthroughs. Today, their ideas speak directly to controversies that rage between cognitivists and connectionists, eliminative materialists and Wittgensteinians, functionalists and anti-reductionists. However, despite their genuine achievements, the cyberneticians had too much confidence in the power of their theories and made serious mistakes that led the next generation of thinkers to ignore their work. The development of a scientific theory of mind was thus significantly delayed. A profound and beautifully written book, The Mechanization of the Mind brings back to life the intellectual brilliance and excitement that attended the birth of cognitive science more than fifty years ago, and recasts our understanding of the history of the twentieth century thought.
...More
Article
Hayles, N. Katherine;
Pulizzi, James J.;
(2010)
Narrating Consciousness: Language, Media and Embodiment
(/isis/citation/CBB001035622/)
Book
Cordeschi, Roberto;
(2002)
The Discovery of the Artificial Behavior, Mind and Machines before and beyond Cybernetics
(/isis/citation/CBB000201336/)
Article
Barnett, S. A.;
(2003)
The Pale Cast of Thought: An Essay Review of Thinks… by David Lodge
(/isis/citation/CBB000551078/)
Article
Kirkebøen, Geir;
(2001)
Descartes' Embodied Psychology: Descartes' or Damasio's Error?
(/isis/citation/CBB000300809/)
Article
Cellamare, Davide;
(2014)
Anatomy and the Body in Renaissance Protestant Psychology
(/isis/citation/CBB001202400/)
Essay Review
Kline, Ronald R.;
(2011)
Cybernetics As a Usable Past
(/isis/citation/CBB001566758/)
Book
Wilson, Elizabeth A.;
(2010)
Affect and Artificial Intelligence
(/isis/citation/CBB001220177/)
Article
Helen Piel;
Rudolf Seising;
Christian Götter;
(2022)
The Computer Metaphor. Anchoring the Fear of Human Obsolescence(s) since the 20th Century
(/isis/citation/CBB645368745/)
Essay Review
Mirowski, Philip;
(2012)
Minding the Cybernetic Gap
(/isis/citation/CBB001566998/)
Essay Review
Halpern, Orit;
(2012)
Affective Machines
(/isis/citation/CBB001566997/)
Book
Pickering, Andrew;
(2009)
The Cybernetic Brain: Sketches of Another Future
(/isis/citation/CBB001020048/)
Book
Patrizia Guarnieri;
(2016)
Italian Psychology and Jewish Emigration under Fascism: From Florence to Jerusalem and New York
(/isis/citation/CBB330197052/)
Article
Dennis Doyle;
(2019)
A Load off Whose Heart? Psychiatry and the Politics of Respectability and Race Representation in Harlem, 1943-45
(/isis/citation/CBB346226542/)
Article
Hwang, Kwang-Kuo;
(2013)
Linking Science to Culture: Challenge to Psychologists
(/isis/citation/CBB001201352/)
Article
Innerhofer, Roland;
Rothe, Katja;
(2010)
Regulierung des Verhaltens zwischen den Weltkriegen. Robert Musil und Kurt Lewin
(/isis/citation/CBB001022053/)
Thesis
Asaro, Peter M.;
(2006)
On the Origins of the Synthetic Mind: Working Models, Mechanisms, and Simulations
(/isis/citation/CBB001560562/)
Book
E. R. Truitt;
(2016)
Medieval Robots: Mechanism, Magic, Nature, and Art
(/isis/citation/CBB258385375/)
Chapter
Asaro, Peter M.;
(2008)
From Mechanisms of Adaptation to Intelligence Amplifiers: The Philosophy of W. Ross Ashby
(/isis/citation/CBB000760385/)
Article
Gerovitch, Slava;
(2002)
Love-Hate for Man-Machine Metaphors in Soviet Physiology: From Pavlov to “Physiological Cybernetics”
(/isis/citation/CBB000300217/)
Book
Shanker, Stuart;
(2003)
Philosophy of Science, Logic and Mathematics in the 20th Century
(/isis/citation/CBB000502126/)
Be the first to comment!