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Impossible mindsmy neurons, my consc...
~
Aleksander, Igor.
Impossible mindsmy neurons, my consciousness /
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Impossible mindsIgor Aleksander.
其他題名:
my neurons, my consciousness /
其他題名:
My neurons, my consciousness
作者:
Aleksander, Igor.
出版者:
London :Imperial College Press ;c2015.
面頁冊數:
1 online resource :ill.
附註:
Electronic access only.
標題:
Consciousness.
電子資源:
https://www.worldscientific.com/worldscibooks/10.1142/p971#t=toc
ISBN:
9781783265701$q(electronic bk.)
Impossible mindsmy neurons, my consciousness /
Aleksander, Igor.
Impossible minds
my neurons, my consciousness /[electronic resource] :My neurons, my consciousnessIgor Aleksander. - Rev. ed. - London :Imperial College Press ;c2015. - 1 online resource :ill.
Electronic access only.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 403-412) and index.
ch. 1. Who's afraid of Magnus? Artificial consciousness : the very idea! -- ch. 2. Neurons and thought. The basic guess. Defining my own consciousness. The consciousness of others. The power of modelling. The Danger of inappropriate modelling. Why neurons? The mind's eye. Learning and remembering. In a nutshell... Philosophy and consciousness. Penrose. The basic guess in perspective. Postscript to chapter 2 : What stuff makes me conscious? Molecula's story -- ch. 3. Automata and brains. Automata theory : mathematics anyone can do. The wheel machine. Some shorthand. Building machines with neurons. The behaviour of neural machines. The function of neurons: learning and generalisation. Learning or programming? A touch of perspective: have we lost sight of consciousness? Neuroanatomy: the shape of the brain. The cortex. The visual system. How does the brain create consciousness? The concentric theory of consciousness. The language of automata: a summary. Postscript to chapter 3 : Automaton does not mean zombie. Molecula's story -- ch. 4. The inner eye of consciousness. Preamble : engineering the mind of Magnus. Designing an octopus. The daydreaming automaton. The state structure of daydreams and dreams. Learning to be conscious. Has the Cartesian theatre reopened? Postscript to chapter 4: enter phenomenology. Molecula's story -- ch. 5. Who am I? The Me in consciousness. The "self" as others see it. The psychology of self. Self, personality and state structure. An image of the future. Another brief look at sleep. The self as knowing what I can do. Will and consciousness. Will and personality. Returning to the self in philosophy and psychology. Kelly's personal state structures. So, who am I? -- Postscript to chapter 5 : The challenge of 'me'. Molecula's story -- ch. 6. Beginnings and words. Setting human beings apart. Knowing the names of things. What is an object? Associating names. Where are the objects? A changing world. Concepts and logic... More logic... Verbs. Novelty. Abstractions and confusions. Theories of meaning. Whither the word of God? Postscript to chapter 6 : Imagining the meaning of language. Molecula's story -- ch. 7. Give me a Teddy... Battle at dawn. "Mah mah". Magnus utters its first words. "On human communication". The universality of languages. An alternative to inheritance. The effectiveness of iconic representation. Generalisation and apparent rules. Abstraction and mastery. Why no errors? A three-sided battle. Postscript to chapter 7 : Acquiring language : what's new? Molecula's story -- ch. 8. Qualia, instinct and emotion. A philosopher's weapon. Qualia. Nagel's bat. Dennett's view on qualia as a philosophical blind alley. Colour vision in people. Iconic creation of qualia : an experiment in colour. The recall of qualitative sensory states. More inner sensations : emotions or instincts? Instinct. Emotions. The emotional robot. The importance of the private world. Postscript to chapter 8 : Qualia and emotions as computational processes. Molecula's story -- ch. 9. What's the use of artificial minds? The human as god. The historical robot. The robot as a literary object. The robot as master of the human race. Sci-fi robots. The human machine. The influence of the computer scientist. Autonomous agents and the intelligence of an ant. Cog, the philosopher and Magnus. A proliferation of conscious robots. Philosophers and neurons. The awe and the mystery. Postscript to chapter 9 : The challenge of human mentation. Molecula's story -- ch. 10. Magnus 2030 AD : an interview. Forty years. An epilogue? Postscript to chapter 10 : Meeting a conscious robot. Molecula's story.
Impossible Minds : My Neurons, My Consciousness has been written to satisfy the curiosity each and every one of us has about our own consciousness. It takes the view that the neurons in our heads are the source of consciousness and attempts to explain how this happens. Although it talks of neural networks, it explains what they are and what they do in such a way that anyone may understand. While the topic is partly philosophical, the text makes no assumptions of prior knowledge of philosophy; and so contains easy excursions into the important ideas of philosophy that may be missing in the education of a computer scientist. The approach is pragmatic throughout ; there are many references to material on experiments that were done in our laboratories. The first edition of the book was written to introduce curious readers to the way that the consciousness we all enjoy might depend on the networks of neurons that make up the brain. In this second edition, it is recognized that these arguments still stand, but that they have been taken much further by an increasing number of researchers. A post-script has now been written for each chapter to inform the reader of these developments and provide an up-to-date bibliography. A new epilogue has been written to summarize the state-of-the art of the search for consciousness in neural automata, for researchers in computation, students of philosophy, and anyone who is fascinated by what is one of the most engaging scientific endeavours of the day. This book also tells a story. A story of a land where people think that they are automata without much in the way of consciousness, a story of cormorants and cliffs by the sea, a story of what it might be like to be a conscious machine...
ISBN: 9781783265701$q(electronic bk.)Subjects--Topical Terms:
181271
Consciousness.
LC Class. No.: BF311 / .A493 2015
Dewey Class. No.: 128/.2
Impossible mindsmy neurons, my consciousness /
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ch. 1. Who's afraid of Magnus? Artificial consciousness : the very idea! -- ch. 2. Neurons and thought. The basic guess. Defining my own consciousness. The consciousness of others. The power of modelling. The Danger of inappropriate modelling. Why neurons? The mind's eye. Learning and remembering. In a nutshell... Philosophy and consciousness. Penrose. The basic guess in perspective. Postscript to chapter 2 : What stuff makes me conscious? Molecula's story -- ch. 3. Automata and brains. Automata theory : mathematics anyone can do. The wheel machine. Some shorthand. Building machines with neurons. The behaviour of neural machines. The function of neurons: learning and generalisation. Learning or programming? A touch of perspective: have we lost sight of consciousness? Neuroanatomy: the shape of the brain. The cortex. The visual system. How does the brain create consciousness? The concentric theory of consciousness. The language of automata: a summary. Postscript to chapter 3 : Automaton does not mean zombie. Molecula's story -- ch. 4. The inner eye of consciousness. Preamble : engineering the mind of Magnus. Designing an octopus. The daydreaming automaton. The state structure of daydreams and dreams. Learning to be conscious. Has the Cartesian theatre reopened? Postscript to chapter 4: enter phenomenology. Molecula's story -- ch. 5. Who am I? The Me in consciousness. The "self" as others see it. The psychology of self. Self, personality and state structure. An image of the future. Another brief look at sleep. The self as knowing what I can do. Will and consciousness. Will and personality. Returning to the self in philosophy and psychology. Kelly's personal state structures. So, who am I? -- Postscript to chapter 5 : The challenge of 'me'. Molecula's story -- ch. 6. Beginnings and words. Setting human beings apart. Knowing the names of things. What is an object? Associating names. Where are the objects? A changing world. Concepts and logic... More logic... Verbs. Novelty. Abstractions and confusions. Theories of meaning. Whither the word of God? Postscript to chapter 6 : Imagining the meaning of language. Molecula's story -- ch. 7. Give me a Teddy... Battle at dawn. "Mah mah". Magnus utters its first words. "On human communication". The universality of languages. An alternative to inheritance. The effectiveness of iconic representation. Generalisation and apparent rules. Abstraction and mastery. Why no errors? A three-sided battle. Postscript to chapter 7 : Acquiring language : what's new? Molecula's story -- ch. 8. Qualia, instinct and emotion. A philosopher's weapon. Qualia. Nagel's bat. Dennett's view on qualia as a philosophical blind alley. Colour vision in people. Iconic creation of qualia : an experiment in colour. The recall of qualitative sensory states. More inner sensations : emotions or instincts? Instinct. Emotions. The emotional robot. The importance of the private world. Postscript to chapter 8 : Qualia and emotions as computational processes. Molecula's story -- ch. 9. What's the use of artificial minds? The human as god. The historical robot. The robot as a literary object. The robot as master of the human race. Sci-fi robots. The human machine. The influence of the computer scientist. Autonomous agents and the intelligence of an ant. Cog, the philosopher and Magnus. A proliferation of conscious robots. Philosophers and neurons. The awe and the mystery. Postscript to chapter 9 : The challenge of human mentation. Molecula's story -- ch. 10. Magnus 2030 AD : an interview. Forty years. An epilogue? Postscript to chapter 10 : Meeting a conscious robot. Molecula's story.
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Impossible Minds : My Neurons, My Consciousness has been written to satisfy the curiosity each and every one of us has about our own consciousness. It takes the view that the neurons in our heads are the source of consciousness and attempts to explain how this happens. Although it talks of neural networks, it explains what they are and what they do in such a way that anyone may understand. While the topic is partly philosophical, the text makes no assumptions of prior knowledge of philosophy; and so contains easy excursions into the important ideas of philosophy that may be missing in the education of a computer scientist. The approach is pragmatic throughout ; there are many references to material on experiments that were done in our laboratories. The first edition of the book was written to introduce curious readers to the way that the consciousness we all enjoy might depend on the networks of neurons that make up the brain. In this second edition, it is recognized that these arguments still stand, but that they have been taken much further by an increasing number of researchers. A post-script has now been written for each chapter to inform the reader of these developments and provide an up-to-date bibliography. A new epilogue has been written to summarize the state-of-the art of the search for consciousness in neural automata, for researchers in computation, students of philosophy, and anyone who is fascinated by what is one of the most engaging scientific endeavours of the day. This book also tells a story. A story of a land where people think that they are automata without much in the way of consciousness, a story of cormorants and cliffs by the sea, a story of what it might be like to be a conscious machine...
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https://www.worldscientific.com/worldscibooks/10.1142/p971#t=toc
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