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Flesh and Machines explores the startlingly reciprocal
connection between humans and their technological brethren, and explains how this
relationship is being redefined as humans develop increasingly complex machines.
The impetus to build machines that exhibit lifelike behaviors stretches back centuries,
but for the last fifteen years much of this work has been done in Rodney Brook's
laboratory at MIT. His goal is not simply to build machines that are like humans
but to alter our perception of the potential capabilities of robots. Our current
attitude toward intelligent robots, he asserts, is simply a reflection of our
own view of ourselves. In Flesh and Machines,
Brooks challenges that view by suggesting that human nature can be seen to possess
the essential characteristics of a machine. Our instinctive rejection of that
idea, he believes, is itself a conditioned response: we have programmed ourselves
to believe in our "tribal specialness" as proof of our uniqueness.
Provocative, persuasive, compelling, and unprecedented, Flesh
and Machines presents a vision of our future and our future selves.
Rodney A. Brooks is Fujitsu Professor of Computer Science
and Engineering at MIT and director of the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory.
He is also chairman and chief technological officer of iRobot Corporation. He
is a founding fellow of the American Association for Artificial Intelligence (AAAI)
and a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).
The author of several books and a contributor to many journals, he was one of
the subjects of Errol Morris's 1997 documentary, Fast, Cheap, and Out of Control.
Brooks was born in Australia and now lives in suburban Boston. |