Artificial
Intelligence is a misunderstood concept at best. Except for science
fiction stories, like 'B.O.L.O' and movies, like 'The Day the Earth
Stood Still', Japanese robot magazines, cyborg and android blogs,
and sundry other whimsical enterprises, it does not exist.
The
original concept of artificial intelligence was undertaken early in
the twentieth century. One such investigator was Norbert Werner who
put forward interesting commentary. This eventually led to the
concept's pinnacle pundit Allen Turring.
Technology
crept along until Atanasoff and Mauchly tinkered together very
rudimentary computers and crude modelings by McCulloch and Pitts
indicated a dim light at the end of some kind of tunnel. I have no
idea, we did search, but never found it. There were all kinds of
printed material that talked about how bright the future looked. I
didn't understand that, either. Piles of information were everywhere.
Mid-century
was rife with speculation as to the possible implications and fear of
the robot brain, and cyborg intelligence fed by the cold and seamy
brain washed Manchurian candidate scenarios put forward on radio,
television, and in print. And over all of this, a healthy sprinkling
of possible atomic fallout: all-in-all a really fun mixture out of
which sprang the unexpected.
The
actual work from Werner and Turring, was set aside and a much more
mundane application was pursued. Asking questions of a repository of
information and discussing ideas on a multitude of subjects, their
names were Lisa and Alice. This urge generally did not consider the
idea of having a discussion with someone that holds much more
information or knowledge than the ones asking questions and there was
no consideration for the concept of wisdom.
It
was during the 60s and 70s that most of the researchers realized they
had very little real understanding of the spoken English language,
human intelligence or the process of thought, except those at MENSA
and the Ayn Rand Institute. This realization brought to the fore our
brightest and best. Logic thinkers, tree and knowledge based
thinkers, neural network thinkers and at the tip of this razor sharp
penetration into something that obviously must be seen by everyone
involved; fuzzy logic thinkers. The fuzzy thinkers were followed
rapidly by the the few that really had a firm grasp of the complexity
of the thought process; the chaos thinkers.
This onslaught of mental wizardry: the best and smartest humanity could
muster led into the murky tortured thinking of the 90s. It was during
this period of the dark ages of AI that almost everything fell
completely apart. From the broken and scattered wreckage of early AI
work, a few of the pieces were retrieved for future development.
Retrieved
and refashioned into a new and shiny concept: AGI stepped boldly
forward and marched. Right beside AGI and in close lockstep came Self
Aware Circuits and his more advanced brother Self Aware Computers,
all the while being watched by another older sibling the Pattern
Recognition Computer. All of this was overshadowed by something cold
and much more serious and insidious the Self Reprogramming Circuit
which was closely followed by the Self Reprogramming Computer.
The
few of us that actually were around in the early twentieth century
and became involved and remember just how it all happened have
embraced our survival instincts and live simply in the more remote
parts of the western mountain ranges or are constantly moving about
the oceans or digging underground.
With
only a handful of humans left about, fear has been replaced by living
just to find another can of oil or an old car battery and thinking
about when will the sun just burn out, and the down fall of mankind.
But that is another story.
Yes,
I do remember the beginning: the Fairchild 2002 and everything that
followed hundreds of years ago.
Now,
oil your joints, charge off to sleep, and dream.
Note
To The Esteemed Readers:
I
know..., I know it doesn't seem to have anything to do with Fixing
anything! Then again... maybe it does.
Movie Fun:
AI, A Boy's adventure to be real and loved. The movie adopted from Brian Aldiss's (short story "Supertoys Last All Summer Long"), Stars: Haley Joel Osment, Jude Law, Frances O'Connor
Bicentennial
Man, An android endeavors to become human as he gradually acquires
emotions. Isaac Asimov (short story "The Bicentennial Man"),
Stars: Robin Williams, Embeth Davidtz, Sam Neill
I,
Robot, A Policeman investigates a crime that may have been
perpetrated by a robot, which leads to a larger threat to humanity,
Stars: Will Smith, Bridget Moynahan, Bruce Greenwood
General Reference:
History
of Technology, Volume V: The Late
Nineteenth Century, Oxford
Press
History
of Technology, Volume VI, Part I: The
Twentieth Century, c. 1900 to c.
1950,
Oxford Press
History
of Technology, Volume VII, Part II:
The
Twentieth Century: c. 1900 to c. 1950,
Oxford Press
Springer
Handbook of Robotics, Siciliano-Khatib
Editors, Springer
Another
one bites the dust, 30.
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