Computationalism : new directions / edited by Matthias Scheutz. - 1 PDF (xiii, 209 pages).

"A Bradford book."

Includes bibliographical references (p. [187]-198) and index.

Computationalism--the next generation / Matthias Scheutz -- The foundations of computing / Brian Cantwell Smith -- Narrow versus wide mechanism / B. Jack Copeland -- The irrelevance of turing machines to artificial intelligence / Aaron Sloman -- The practical logic of computer work / Philip E. Agre -- Symbol grounding and the origin of language / Stevan Harnad -- Authentic intentionality / John Haugeland.

Restricted to subscribers or individual electronic text purchasers.

Classical computationalism -- -the view that mental states are computational states -- -has come under attack in recent years. Critics claim that in defining computation solely in abstract, syntactic terms, computationalism neglects the real-time, embodied, real-world constraints with which cognitive systems must cope. Instead of abandoning computationalism altogether, however, some researchers are reconsidering it, recognizing that real-world computers, like minds, must deal with issues of embodiment, interaction, physical implementation, and semantics.This book lays the foundation for a successor notion of computationalism. It covers a broad intellectual range, discussing historic developments of the notions of computation and mechanism in the computationalist model, the role of Turing machines and computational practice in artificial intelligence research, different views of computation and their role in the computational theory of mind, the nature of intentionality, and the origin of language.




Mode of access: World Wide Web

9780262283106


Artificial intelligence.
Computer science.


Electronic books.

QA76 / .C54747 2002eb