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- "Temple of Set Reading List:
- Category 15 - Cybernetics and Artificial Intelligence" (3/1/86CE)
- Reprinted from: _The Crystal Tablet of Set_
- (c) Temple of Set 1989 CE
- Weirdbase file version by TS permission
-
- by Michael A. Aquino, Ipsissimus VI* Temple of Set
- Electronic mail: MCI-Mail 278-4041
-
- Everyone knows that computers and computer science are continuing to
- mushroom, but few really know just how much and with what impact. The
- reality is astonishing in some ways and overblown in others. Industrialized
- civilizations of the planet are now so dependent upon computerized systems
- of commerce and communication that they are close to being "at the mercy" of
- the computer scientist, whose responsibility it is to "make the things work"
- - and, incidentally, to set parameters for human enterprise by taking
- computer design in one direction or another. Obviously a computer-dominated
- society is hyperefficient in some ways, hypervulnerable in others. At the
- very least the magician must know enough about the field so that he is
- sensitive to the ways in which it influences him - and the ways in which he
- may use it to influence others.
-
- 15A. _Future Shock_ by Alvin Toffler. NY: Random House, 1970. (TS-3) MA:
- "Strictly speaking, this is a study of accelerated styles of living rather
- than of computers per se. It is included in this section because it
- illustrates the environment in which computers have become increasingly
- indispensable. It is also important to consider the directions in which this
- environment may proceed, and the impact of related phenomena. _Future Shock_
- has been around for a long time now, but its propositions are no less valid
- today than they were when the book was first published."
-
- 15B. _God & Golem, Inc.: A Comment on Certain Points where Cybernetics
- Impinges on Religion_ by Norbert Wiener. Cambridge: MIT Press, 1964. (TS-3)
- MA: "Wiener, who coined the term 'cybernetics' in 1948, later went on to
- consider the ultimate implications of artificial intelligence. A series of
- his lectures was consolidated into this 100-page volume, which went on to
- win the National Book Award. The argument is one of ethics rather than of
- technology."
-
- 15C. _Social Issues in Computing_ by C.C. Gotlieb and A. Borodin. NY:
- Academic Press, 1973. (TS-3) MA: "A 300-page text dealing with computer
- capabilities, present uses, and possible uses. Included are discussions
- about the computer industry itself, information systems and privacy,
- forecasting, simulations, data banks, professional ethics, and the use of
- computers as a power device."
-
- 15D. _I, Robot_ by Isaac Asimov. NY: Doubleday, 1950. (TS-3) 4E (M.A.'s
- Heathkit HERO-1 robot): "A classic of science not-so- fiction, exploring the
- implications of artificial intelligence. Famed for the 'three laws of
- robotics', the concept of robopsychology, and the positronic brain. The
- reality of this book is closer than you think/compute ..."
-
- 15E. _As Man Becomes Machine: The Next Step in Evolution_ by David Rorvik.
- NY: Pocket Books #0-671-82230-6, 1978. (TS-3) MA: "An anthology [in layman's
- terms] of the research towards the evolution of the cyborg - first the
- gradual replacement of various organic components of the human body with
- inorganic machinery, then the transference of consciousness from the organic
- brain to an inorganic computer. Various hypotheses from this book are
- illustrated in the character of Lorin Xanpol the Pantechnikon in #21I."
-
- 15F. _Machines Who Think: A Personal Inquiry into the History and Prospects
- of Artificial Intelligence_ by Pamela McCorduck. San Francisco: W.H.
- Freeman, 1979. (TS-3) MA: "This is THE book on artificial intelligence. Over
- the years I have examined and rejected many books on this subject as being
- either too elementary or too technical. McCorduck is a reporter, not a
- computer scientist, but she's got a first-rate [organic] brain of her own
- and a writing style that turns this potentially confusing subject into an
- exciting adventure. From the book: 'I like to think of artificial
- intelligence as the scientific apotheosis of a venerable cultural tradition,
- the proper successor to golden girls and brazen heads, disreputable but
- visionary geniuses and crackpots, and fantastical laboratories during stormy
- November nights. Its heritage is singularly rich and varied, with legacies
- from myth and literature; philosophy and art; mathematics, science, and
- engineering; warfare, commerce, and even quackery. I've spoken of roads or
- routes, but in fact it is all more like a web, the woven connectedness of
- all human enterprise.'"
-
-