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Artificial intelligence (AI) consists of a dazzling set of computational tools that few fully understand. From our cars to our homes to how we socialize and work, AI is everywhere and makes life so much better. It might irritate in some instances but mostly it helps. Or it seems to.Yet AI developers have an unusually narrow perspective on intelligence, reducing all judgments to a calculus. Machines excel at this form of intelligence, but it is not how most people define the word. While this narrowing has provided useful direction for the development of computers, Richard Harper argues, it also constrains what people are capable of. When we reach for AI to help us unwind, connect with others, or even create art, it’s not analytical intelligence that we are after. The human behaviours that AI seeks to supplement are shaped as much by mood, morals, indolence, and interrelation as they are by calculation. Drawing on three decades of inquiry, Harper reveals that when we are misled about what AI cannot do, we fail to see what it can.The Shape of Thought shows how to break free from this narrow view. By better understanding the many different things that people achieve with computers, we can improve and diversify AI to allow for richer, more beneficial human-computer interaction.
Richard H.R. Harper is director of the Centre for Material Social Futures at Lancaster University, visiting professor in the College of Science at the University of Swansea, and the author of several award-winning books.
Acknowledgements viiIntroduction: The Shape of Thought in the Age of AI 31 From Turing to Chatbots 252 The Language of Use 633 The Geographies of Intelligence at Home 974 The Bonds of Intelligence in Communication 1265 The Shape of Intelligent Selves 160Conclusion: Shaping Thoughts for the Age of AI 198Notes 219References 233Index 245
'This book will be welcomed by anyone concerned or surprised that the definition of intelligence seems to be changing. Richard Harper is a wise and reassuring guide, placing recent anxieties over AI in the context of decades of technical change. The Shape of Thought cements his reputation as one of the leading philosophers helping us to understand everyday technologies, now and for the future.' Alan Blackwell, University of Cambridge