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The Most Human Human: A Defence of Humanity in the Age of the Computer Hardcover – 5 May 2011

4.8 out of 5 stars 4 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Viking (5 May 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0670920800
  • ISBN-13: 978-0670920808
  • Product Dimensions: 14.4 x 3 x 22.2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 743,827 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

Remarkable, enjoyable, heartening. A philosophical joyride connecting the thoughts of Aristotle with David Brent ... The day that a machine creates work of such wit and originality, we should all be very worried (The Times )

Lively, thought-stirring, entertaining ... an invaluable sourcebook on computing in modern-day life ... compelling insights (John Gray New Statesman )

Tremendously entertaining ... explores human identity by asking what we can glean about ourselves from successes and failures in the field of artificial intelligence (Metro **** )

Fast-paced, witty, and thoroughly winning ... investigates the nature of human interactions, the meaning of language, and the essence of what sets us apart from machines ... fabulous (Publishers Weekly )

Excellent ... a fascinating explanation of what it means to be human ... In one particularly insightful section, Christian notes that we can only be replaced by machines if we have first allowed ourselves to become like them (Financial Times )

Immensely ambitious and bold, intellectually provocative, while at the same time entertaining and witty - a delightful book about how to live a meaningful, thriving life (Alan Lightman, Author Of Einstein's Dreams )

Such an important book ... Brian Christian takes on this very weighty task, and somehow makes it fun (Brian Shenk, Author Of The Genius In All Of Us )

A lively personable read and an empowering affirmation of our species (Time Out **** )

An eye-opening inquest into human imagination, thought, conversation, love and deception (David Eagleman, author of Sum )

Absorbing ... Christian cleverly suggests that the Turing Test not only tells us how smart computers are but also teaches us about ourselves. ... covers a great deal of ground with admirable clarity but with a lightness of touch ... has a real knack for summing up key ideas by applying them to real-life situations (Julian Baggini Wall Street Journal )

An irreverent picaresque ... What Christian learns along the way is that if machines win the imitation game as often as they do, it's not because they're getting better at acting human; it's because we're getting worse ... An authentic son of Frost, he learns by going where he has to go, and in doing so proves that both he and his book deserve their title (The New York Times )

Strange, fertile and sometimes beautiful ... takes both the deep limitations and halting progress of artificial intelligence as an occasion for thinking about the most human activity (Matthew Crawford, Author Of The Case For Working With Your Hands )

Entertaining and informative (Economist )

About the Author

Brian Christian was born in 1984. He holds a dual degree from Brown University in computer science and philosophy, and an MFA in poetry. His work has appeared in both literary and scientific journals. In 2009, he competed with the world's leading artificial intelligence software at the international Turing Test competition, where he was awarded the prize for 'The Most Human Human'. This is his first book. In it, you will discover: Why computers can fly planes but can't ride bicycles How Deep Blue beat Gary Kasparov but why it didn't count What arguments have in common with amnesia Why speaking to a machine is like a bad date What life is all about and how to live it better...


Customer Reviews

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Top Customer Reviews

Format: Hardcover
I loved this book. Really easy to read, but also intelligent, stimulating, and witty.

Sometimes the style is a bit confusing, when he jumps in and out of the present tense, plus there were massive footnotes which were all worth reading so really should have just been in the text (in my opinion) - but these are minor niggles.

Put me on to a lot of interesting ideas and people I had not heard of. Explained some things I had been wondering about, e.g. it includes a very good explanation of how file compression works, and loads of stuff I didn't know about chess.

If you are interested in language and philosophy you will enjoy this book. The author explores areas where art and science meet.

Definitely worth reading (and I'm a real person posting this review, not a robot, honest!).
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Format: Hardcover
Ostensibly the book is about Brian Christian's adventure preparing for and playing as a human "confederate" in the 2009 annual Loebner Prize contest. This is the competition in which AI enthusiasts use the Turning test to see which computers are the best at fooling human judges into thinking they are human. Christian sits at a remote computer and tries to convince the judges that he is a human and not just a bot pretending to be human. If he succeeds and he is the best of the humans he will win the "Most Human Human" award.

I think that after reading this book that Christian is indeed a very human human. He is clever, creative, curious to an almost amazing degree and is social; but whether he is the most human human will be in considerable doubt even if he wins the award. (No spoilers here!) The reason is simple: the Turing test tells us nothing about Christian physically and very little about him emotionally. But more than that the Turing test (and this book) is really more--much more--about language than it is about what it means to be alive (as in the subtitle of the book).

Christian is an expert on language--I should say languages since he is a computer geek as well as a teacher of poetry. He knows code and he knows Shakespeare. And Christian is also very smart and very knowledgeable as you'll discover by reading this book. So (of course!) he can't be the most human human. Alas.

Christian is also a very good writer. His writing style is loud, bold, adventuresome and full of "Look mom, I'm writing" flourishes. There are asides aplenty and oodles of arcane factoids sprinkled everywhere. A poet writes in a nonlinear fashion using poetic devices such as sound and rhythm to enhance meaning.
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Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
Best book I've read in quite a while. So many insights it's hard to know where to start. Will almost certainly reread within the month
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Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
Really interesting and thought provoking. A brilliant concept for a book
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