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*Choice* Outstanding Academic Book 2007
Mind as Machine
A History of Cognitive Science
Margaret Boden
1,704 pages
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line drawings
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246x171mm
978-0-19-924144-6
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Hardback
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29 June 2006
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- The definitive history of cognitive science
- One of the twentieth-century's most fascinating new disciplines
- Brings together a host of other subjects, from linguistics to AI
- Boden is the ideal author to tell the story - she has known many of the key figures personally
- A rich resource for anyone working on the mind
Cognitive science is among the most fascinating intellectual achievements of the modern era. The quest to understand the mind is an ancient one. But modern science has offered new insights and techniques that have revolutionized this enquiry. Oxford University Press now presents a masterly history of the field, told by one of its most eminent practitioners. Psychology is the thematic heart of cognitive science, which aims to understand human (and animal) minds. But its core theoretical ideas are drawn from cybernetics and artificial intelligence, and many cognitive scientists try to build functioning models of how the mind works. In that sense, Margaret
Boden suggests, its key insight is that mind is a (very special) machine. Because the mind has many different aspects, the field is highly interdisciplinary. It integrates psychology not only with cybernetics/AI, but also with neuroscience and clinical neurology; with the philosophy of mind, language, and logic; with linguistic work on grammar, semantics, and communication; with anthropological studies of cultures; and with biological (and A-Life) research on animal behaviour, evolution, and life itself. Each of these disciplines, in its own way, asks what the mind is, what it does, how it works, how it develops---and how it is even possible. Boden traces the key questions back to Descartes's revolutionary writings, and to the ideas of his followers--and his radical
critics--through the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Her story shows how controversies in the development of experimental physiology, neurophysiology, psychology, evolutionary biology, embryology, and logic are still relevant today. Then she guides the reader through the complex interlinked paths along which the study of mind developed in the twentieth century. Cognitive science covers all mental phenomena: not just 'cognition' (knowledge), but also emotion, personality, psychopathology, social communication, religion, motor action, and consciousness. In each area, Boden introduces the key ideas and researchers and discusses those philosophical critics who see cognitive science as fundamentally misguided. And she sketches the waves of resistance and acceptance on the part of the media
and general public, showing how these have affected the development of the field. No one else could tell this story as Boden can: she has been a member of the cognitive science community since the late-1950s, and has known many of its key figures personally. Her narrative is written in a lively, swift-moving style, enriched by the personal touch of someone who knows the story at first hand. Her history looks forward as well as back: besides asking how state-of-the-art research compares with the hopes of the early pioneers, she identifies the most promising current work. Mind as Machine will be a rich resource for anyone working on the mind, in any academic discipline, who wants to know how our understanding of mental capacities has advanced over the
years.Readership: Scholars and students working on the mind in any discipline
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Margaret Boden, University of Sussex
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"Mind as Machine is instructive, thought-provocative, and interdisciplinary in its approach...One cannot deny the fact that Professor Margaret Boden is an excellent writer" - Yves Laberge Journal of Chemical Neuroanatomy "Anyone will profit from the clarity in context that Boden provides. Her impressive learning is evident at every turn, everything is deeply understood and thought about, and almost everything important seems to have been read and incorporated, down to very recent and still forthcoming literature - this is not a history of things past but an overall account of the discipline as it stands now." - Vincent C. Muller, Minds and Machines "the writing is clear and engaging throughout, so much
so that it often sounds less like scientific prose than literature." - Roy Behrens, Leonardo OnLine "a triumphant literary event among histories of cognitive science" - Igor Aleksander, Journal of Consciousness Studies "a monumental new history of cognitive science ... scholarly, readable, and even entertaining ... an invaluable resource ... At present it has no rival, and it is hard to imagine any other work that could so completely document the intellectual ferment of the past fifty years" - Michael C. Corballis. Times Literary Supplement
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1: Setting the scene
2: Man as machine: origins of the idea
3: Anticipatory engines
4: Maybe minds are machines too
5: Movements beneath the mantle
6: Cognitive science comes together
7: The rise of computational psychology
8: The mystery of the missing discipline
9: Transforming linguistics
10: When GOFAI was NEWFAI
11: Of bombs and bombshells
12: Connectionism, its birth and renaissance
13: Swimming alongside the kraken
14: From neurophysiology to computational neuroscience
15: A-life in embryo
16: Philosophies of mind as machine
17: What next?
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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