Collins, H. M. 1943-

Artificial experts : social knowledge and intelligent machines / H.M. Collins. - 1 PDF (xiii, 266 pages) : illustrations. - Inside technology . - Inside technology .

Includes bibliographical references (p. [251]-258) and index.

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In Artificial Experts, Collins explains what computers can't do, but he also studies the ordinary and extraordinary things that they can do. He argues that the machines we create are limited because we cannot reproduce in symbols what every community knows, yet we give our machines abilities by the way we embed them in our society. He unfolds a compelling account of the difference between human action and machine intelligence, the core of which is a witty and learned explanation of knowledge itself, of what communities know and the ways in which they know it. H. M. Collins is Professor of Sociology, Head of the School of Social Sciences, and Director of the Science Studies Centre at the University of Bath.




Mode of access: World Wide Web

9780262255936




Artificial intelligence--Social aspects.
Knowledge, Sociology of.
Expert systems (Computer science)


Electronic books.

Q335 / .C54 1990eb

006.3