From the Publisher:
Flesh and Machines explores the startlingly reciprocal connection between humans and their technological brethren, and explains how this relationship is being redefined as humans develop increasingly complex machines. The impetus to build machines that exhibit lifelike behaviors stretches back centuries, but for the last fifteen years much of this work has been done in Rodney Brooks’s laboratory at MIT. His goal is not simply to build machines that are like humans but to alter our perception of the potential capabilities of robots. Our current attitude toward intelligent robots, he asserts, is simply a reflection of our own view of ourselves.
In Flesh and Machines, Brooks challenges that view by suggesting that human nature can be seen to possess the essential characteristics of a machine. Our instinctive rejection of that idea, he believes, is itself a conditioned response: we have programmed ourselves to believe in our “tribal specialness” as proof of our uniqueness.
Provocative, persuasive, compelling, and unprecedented, Flesh and Machines presents a vision of our future and our future selves.
[1]
H. Stowell.
The emperor's new mind
R. Penrose, Oxford University Press, New York (1989) 466 pp. $24.95
,
1990,
Neuroscience.
[2]
Thomas S. Ray,et al.
An Approach to the Synthesis of Life
,
1991
.
[3]
H. Maturana,et al.
The Tree of Knowledge: The Biological Roots of Human Understanding
,
2007
.
[4]
Karl Sims,et al.
Evolving 3D Morphology and Behavior by Competition
,
1994,
Artificial Life.
[5]
John R. Searle,et al.
The Rediscovery of the Mind
,
1995,
Artif. Intell..
[6]
Phil Husbands,et al.
Evolutionary robotics
,
2014,
Evolutionary Intelligence.
[7]
K. Mullen,et al.
Analysis of errors in color agnosia: A single-case study
,
1999
.
[8]
R. Brooks.
The relationship between matter and life
,
2001,
Nature.
[9]
W. Oechel,et al.
Automatic design and manufacture of robotic lifeforms
,
2022
.