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Robotics & Artificial Intelligence, Computer Business & Culture, Internet & World Wide Web, Artificial Intelligence (AI), Robotics & Artificial Intelligence
Creating Internet Intelligence: Wild Computing, Distributed Digital Consciousness, and the Emerging Global Brain by Ben Goertzel β€” book cover

Creating Internet Intelligence: Wild Computing, Distributed Digital Consciousness, and the Emerging Global Brain

by Ben Goertzel
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Overview

Creating Internet Intelligence is an interdisciplinary treatise exploring the hypothesis that global computer and communication networks will one day evolve into an autonomous intelligent system, and making specific recommendations as to what engineers and scientists can do today to encourage and shape this evolution. A general theory of intelligent systems is described, based on the author's previous work; and in this context, the specific notion of Internet intelligence is fleshed out, in its commercial, social, psychological, computer-science, philosophical, and theological aspects. Software engineering work carried out by the author and his team over the last few years, aimed at seeding the emergence of Internet intelligence, is reviewed in some detail, including the Webmind AI Engine, a uniquely powerful Internet-based digital intelligence, and the Webworld platform for peer-to-peer distributed cognition and artificial life. The book should be of interest to computer scientists, philosophers, and social scientists, and more generally to anyone concerned about the nature of the mind, or the evolution of computer and Internet technology and its effect on human life.

Synopsis

Creating Internet Intelligence is an interdisciplinary treatise exploring the hypothesis that global computer and communication networks will one day evolve into an autonomous intelligent system, and making specific recommendations as to what engineers and scientists can do today to encourage and shape this evolution. A general theory of intelligent systems is described, based on the author's previous work; and in this context, the specific notion of Internet intelligence is fleshed out, in its commercial, social, psychological, computer-science, philosophical, and theological aspects. Software engineering work carried out by the author and his team over the last few years, aimed at seeding the emergence of Internet intelligence, is reviewed in some detail, including the Webmind AI Engine, a uniquely powerful Internet-based digital intelligence, and the Webworld platform for peer-to-peer distributed cognition and artificial life. The book should be of interest to computer scientists, philosophers, and social scientists, and more generally to anyone concerned about the nature of the mind, or the evolution of computer and Internet technology and its effect on human life.

Booknews

Straddling categories including computer science, philosophy, and engineering, Goertzel (a mathematician who left academia to start an AI company) looks at the general concepts behind the Internet's move toward a fundamental transition from distributed network to self- organizing intelligent system. Aimed at readers who have "a strong intellectual background" but may lack training in complexity science or other technical disciplines, the work focuses on the idea of "wild computing," in which software programs cease to be tame, trained beasts that simply do what people tell them. Rather, Goertzel believes, the Net will become "a mind in itself ... a world for digital organisms." Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

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Editorials


Straddling categories including computer science, philosophy, and engineering, Goertzel (a mathematician who left academia to start an AI company) looks at the general concepts behind the Internet's move toward a fundamental transition from distributed network to self- organizing intelligent system. Aimed at readers who have "a strong intellectual background" but may lack training in complexity science or other technical disciplines, the work focuses on the idea of "wild computing," in which software programs cease to be tame, trained beasts that simply do what people tell them. Rather, Goertzel believes, the Net will become "a mind in itself ... a world for digital organisms." Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
December 1, 2001
Publisher
Springer-Verlag New York, LLC
Pages
342
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780306467356

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