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The Most Human Human: What Artificial Intelligence Teaches Us about Being Alive Paperback – 6 Mar 2012

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4.4 out of 5 stars 68 customer reviews

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Review


"Illuminating.....an irreverent picaresque that follows its hero from the recondite arena of the 'Nicomachean Ethics' to the even more recondite arena of legal depositions to perhaps the most recondite arena of all, that of speed dating.....As THE MOST HUMAN HUMAN demonstrates, Christian has taken his own words to heart. An authentic son of Frost, he learns by going here he has to go, and in doing so proves that both he and his book deserve their title."--"New York Times Book Review"
"Terrific.....one of the rare successful literary offspring of "Godel, Escher, Bach, "where art and science meet an engaged mind and the friction produces real fire......dense with ideas"--"The New Yorker"
"Absorbing.....Mr. Christian cleverly suggests that the Turing Test not only tells us how smart computers are but also teaches us about ourselves....Mr. Christian covers a great deal of ground with admirable clarity but with a lightness of touch, and he never tries too hard. He alsos

Terrific. . . . Art and science meet an engaged mind and the friction produces real fire.
"The New Yorker"
Illuminating. . . . 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. . . . As "The Most Human Human "demonstrates, Christian has taken his own words to heart.An authentic son of [Robert] 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 Book Review"
Absorbing. . . . Christian covers a great deal of ground with admirable clarity but with a lightness of touch. . . . He also has a real knack for summing up key ideas by applying them to real-life situations. . . . Did Christian become The Most Human Human ?You ll have to read the book to find out.
"The Wall Street Journal
"
Exhilarating. . . .Reading it, I constantly found my mind pinging off of whatever Christian was discussing and into flights of exploratory speculation about the amount of information encoded in the seemingly routine exchanges of small talk or the reasons why it s much harder to tell a false story in reverse chronological order. It s an unusual book whose primary gift lies in distracting you from itself. I d like to see the computers come up with something like that.
"Salon"
Fascinating.
Jon Stewart
Brilliant.
"Financial Times"
Humorous and thought-provoking. . . . Acurious look into the history and potential of artificial intelligence, and a brilliant comparison between artificial intelligence and our natural variety. . . . Christian wants to call attention to how special we are, and his book is a success.
"The Columbus Dispatch"
Excellent.
NPR s Radiolab
Incredibly engrossing.
"The Onion A. V. Club"
Entertaining and informative.
"The Economist"
A charming, friendly, and often funny read.
"The Boston Globe"
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 "and" Ghost"
A book exploring the wild frontiers of chat-bots is appealing enough; I never expected to discover in its pages such an eye-opening inquest into humanimagination, thought, conversation, love and deception. Who would have guessed thatthe best way to understand humanity was to study its imitators?
David Eagleman, author of" Sum "and" Incognito"
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 "(London)
This is a strange, fertile, and sometimes beautiful book. . . . Something like this seems to be going on with the computer. Brian Christian writes witha rare combination of what Pascal took to be two contrary mindsets: the spirit of geometry and the spirit of finesse.He takes both the deep limitations and halting progress of artificial intelligence as an occasion for thinking about the most human activity the art of conversation.
Matthew B. Crawford, author of" Shop Class as Soulcraft"
Lively and thought-stirring. . . . An invaluable sourcebook on computing in modern-day life.
"New Statesman"
Fast-paced, witty, and thoroughly winning. . . . This fabulous book demonstrates that we are capable of experiencing and sharing far deeper thoughts than even the best computers and that too often we fail to achieve the highest level of humanness.
"Publishers Weekly "(starred review)
This is such an important book, a book I ve been waiting and hoping for. Machines are getting so smart that it forces us to take a completely fresh look at what smart is, and at what human is. Brian Christian takes on this very weighty task, and somehow makes it fun. Christian is nimble, insightful, andhumble avery human human, indeed, and one you will like very much.
David Shenk, author of "The Forgetting, The Immortal Game, "and" The Genius in All of Us""

Terrific. . . . Art and science meet an engaged mind and the friction produces real fire.
The New Yorker
Illuminating. . . . 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. . . . As The Most Human Human demonstrates, Christian has taken his own words to heart.An authentic son of [Robert] 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 Book Review
Absorbing. . . . Christian covers a great deal of ground with admirable clarity but with a lightness of touch. . . . He also has a real knack for summing up key ideas by applying them to real-life situations. . . . Did Christian become The Most Human Human ?You ll have to read the book to find out.
The Wall Street Journal

Exhilarating. . . .Reading it, I constantly found my mind pinging off of whatever Christian was discussing and into flights of exploratory speculation about the amount of information encoded in the seemingly routine exchanges of small talk or the reasons why it s much harder to tell a false story in reverse chronological order. It s an unusual book whose primary gift lies in distracting you from itself. I d like to see the computers come up with something like that.
Salon
Fascinating.
Jon Stewart
Brilliant.
Financial Times
Humorous and thought-provoking. . . . Acurious look into the history and potential of artificial intelligence, and a brilliant comparison between artificial intelligence and our natural variety. . . . Christian wants to call attention to how special we are, and his book is a success.
The Columbus Dispatch
Excellent.
NPR s Radiolab
Incredibly engrossing.
The Onion A. V. Club
Entertaining and informative.
The Economist
A charming, friendly, and often funny read.
The Boston Globe
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 and Ghost
A book exploring the wild frontiers of chat-bots is appealing enough; I never expected to discover in its pages such an eye-opening inquest into humanimagination, thought, conversation, love and deception. Who would have guessed thatthe best way to understand humanity was to study its imitators?
David Eagleman, author of Sum and Incognito
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 (London)
This is a strange, fertile, and sometimes beautiful book. . . . Something like this seems to be going on with the computer. Brian Christian writes witha rare combination of what Pascal took to be two contrary mindsets: the spirit of geometry and the spirit of finesse.He takes both the deep limitations and halting progress of artificial intelligence as an occasion for thinking about the most human activity the art of conversation.
Matthew B. Crawford, author of Shop Class as Soulcraft
Lively and thought-stirring. . . . An invaluable sourcebook on computing in modern-day life.
New Statesman
Fast-paced, witty, and thoroughly winning. . . . This fabulous book demonstrates that we are capable of experiencing and sharing far deeper thoughts than even the best computers and that too often we fail to achieve the highest level of humanness.
Publishers Weekly (starred review)
This is such an important book, a book I ve been waiting and hoping for. Machines are getting so smart that it forces us to take a completely fresh look at what smart is, and at what human is. Brian Christian takes on this very weighty task, and somehow makes it fun. Christian is nimble, insightful, andhumble avery human human, indeed, and one you will like very much.
David Shenk, author of The Forgetting, The Immortal Game, and The Genius in All of Us

"

"Terrific. . . . Art and science meet an engaged mind and the friction produces real fire."
--The New Yorker
"Illuminating. . . . 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. . . . As The Most Human Human demonstrates, Christian has taken his own words to heart. An authentic son of [Robert] 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 Book Review
"Absorbing. . . . Christian covers a great deal of ground with admirable clarity but with a lightness of touch. . . . He also has a real knack for summing up key ideas by applying them to real-life situations. . . . Did Christian become 'The Most Human Human'? You'll have to read the book to find out."
--The Wall Street Journal

"Exhilarating. . . . Reading it, I constantly found my mind pinging off of whatever Christian was discussing and into flights of exploratory speculation about the amount of information encoded in the seemingly routine exchanges of small talk or the reasons why it's much harder to tell a false story in reverse chronological order. It's an unusual book whose primary gift lies in distracting you from itself. I'd like to see the computers come up with something like that."
--Salon
"Fascinating."
--Jon Stewart
"Brilliant."
--Financial Times
"Humorous and thought-provoking. . . . A curious look into the history and potential of artificial intelligence, and a brilliant comparison between artificial intelligence and our natural variety. . . . Christian wants to call attention to how special we are, and his book is a success."
--The Columbus Dispatch
"Excellent."
--NPR's "Radiolab"
"Incredibly engrossing."
--The Onion A. V. Club
"Entertaining and informative."
--The Economist
"A charming, friendly, and often funny read."
--The Boston Globe
"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 and Ghost
"A book exploring the wild frontiers of chat-bots is appealing enough; I never expected to discover in its pages such an eye-opening inquest into human imagination, thought, conversation, love and deception. Who would have guessed that the best way to understand humanity was to study its imitators?"
--David Eagleman, author of Sum and Incognito
"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 (London)
"This is a strange, fertile, and sometimes beautiful book. . . . Something like this seems to be going on with the computer. Brian Christian writes with a rare combination of what Pascal took to be two contrary mindsets: the spirit of geometry and the spirit of finesse. He takes both the deep limitations and halting progress of artificial intelligence as an occasion for thinking about the most human activity--the art of conversation."
--Matthew B. Crawford, author of Shop Class as Soulcraft
"Lively and thought-stirring. . . . An invaluable sourcebook on computing in modern-day life."
--New Statesman
"Fast-paced, witty, and thoroughly winning. . . . This fabulous book demonstrates that we are capable of experiencing and sharing far deeper thoughts than even the best computers--and that too often we fail to achieve the highest level of humanness."
--Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"This is such an important book, a book I've been waiting and hoping for. Machines are getting so smart that it forces us to take a completely fresh look at what smart is, and at what human is. Brian Christian takes on this very weighty task, and somehow makes it fun. Christian is nimble, insightful, and humble--a very human human, indeed, and one you will like very much."
--David Shenk, author of The Forgetting, The Immortal Game, and The Genius in All of Us



-Terrific. . . . Art and science meet an engaged mind and the friction produces real fire.-
--The New Yorker
-Illuminating. . . . 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. . . . As The Most Human Human demonstrates, Christian has taken his own words to heart. An authentic son of [Robert] 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 Book Review
-Absorbing. . . . Christian covers a great deal of ground with admirable clarity but with a lightness of touch. . . . He also has a real knack for summing up key ideas by applying them to real-life situations. . . . Did Christian become 'The Most Human Human'? You'll have to read the book to find out.-
--The Wall Street Journal

-Exhilarating. . . . Reading it, I constantly found my mind pinging off of whatever Christian was discussing and into flights of exploratory speculation about the amount of information encoded in the seemingly routine exchanges of small talk or the reasons why it's much harder to tell a false story in reverse chronological order. It's an unusual book whose primary gift lies in distracting you from itself. I'd like to see the computers come up with something like that.-
--Salon
-Fascinating.-
--Jon Stewart
-Brilliant.-
--Financial Times
-Humorous and thought-provoking. . . . A curious look into the history and potential of artificial intelligence, and a brilliant comparison between artificial intelligence and our natural variety. . . . Christian wants to call attention to how special we are, and his book is a success.-
--The Columbus Dispatch
-Excellent.-
--NPR's -Radiolab-
-Incredibly engrossing.-
--The Onion A. V. Club
-Entertaining and informative.-
--The Economist
-A charming, friendly, and often funny read.-
--The Boston Globe
-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 and Ghost
-A book exploring the wild frontiers of chat-bots is appealing enough; I never expected to discover in its pages such an eye-opening inquest into human imagination, thought, conversation, love and deception. Who would have guessed that the best way to understand humanity was to study its imitators?-
--David Eagleman, author of Sum and Incognito
-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 (London)
-This is a strange, fertile, and sometimes beautiful book. . . . Something like this seems to be going on with the computer. Brian Christian writes with a rare combination of what Pascal took to be two contrary mindsets: the spirit of geometry and the spirit of finesse. He takes both the deep limitations and halting progress of artificial intelligence as an occasion for thinking about the most human activity--the art of conversation.-
--Matthew B. Crawford, author of Shop Class as Soulcraft
-Lively and thought-stirring. . . . An invaluable sourcebook on computing in modern-day life.-
--New Statesman
-Fast-paced, witty, and thoroughly winning. . . . This fabulous book demonstrates that we are capable of experiencing and sharing far deeper thoughts than even the best computers--and that too often we fail to achieve the highest level of humanness.-
--Publishers Weekly (starred review)
-This is such an important book, a book I've been waiting and hoping for. Machines are getting so smart that it forces us to take a completely fresh look at what smart is, and at what human is. Brian Christian takes on this very weighty task, and somehow makes it fun. Christian is nimble, insightful, and humble--a very human human, indeed, and one you will like very much.-
--David Shenk, author of The Forgetting, The Immortal Game, and The Genius in All of Us

About the Author

Brian Christian's work has appeared in The Atlantic, Wired, The Wall Street Journal, and many literary and scientific publications. He has been featured on -The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, - NPR's -Radiolab, - and -The Charlie Rose Show, - and has lectured at Google, Microsoft, the London School of Economics, and elsewhere. An award-winning poet, Christian holds a degree in philosophy and computer science from Brown University and an MFA in poetry from the University of Washington. The Most Human Human, a Wall Street Journal bestseller, has been translated into nine languages. Christian lives in Philadelphia.
Visit the author's website at: www.brchristian.com.


Customer Reviews

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Amazon.com: 4.4 out of 5 stars 68 reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Unequivocally recommend! 23 Jan. 2015
By Steve - Published on Amazon.com
Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
An excellent read for computer science nerds, psychology nerds, sociology nerds, linguistics nerds, or philosophy nerds. Pretty much anybody who likes thinking about how people interact with each other
5.0 out of 5 stars A Most enjoyable challenging read 15 Feb. 2017
By Diane Knowles - Published on Amazon.com
Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
So much more than just the Turing test and chatbots. What does it to be "human" and "real": definitions that are becoming more blurry each passing day living with technology literally every waking hour.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Highly recommend. 16 April 2015
By Sandy Field - Published on Amazon.com
Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
This book brings in information from a wide variety of fields to create an interesting and engaging story about who we are, how we communicate, and what makes us human. This is a very thought provoking book with lots of surprising insights. Highly recommend.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Can Machines Become Humanly Intelligent and How Will We Know? 18 Aug. 2011
By lauren seiler - Published on Amazon.com
Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
Broadly educated in poetry and computers and deeply immersed in philosophy, Brian Christian writes about his becoming The Most Human Human. The depth and breadth of his exposition, the importance of the idea -- how will we know if machines become humanly intelligent -- and the topic of a Turing Test Contest, make for a wonderful read. His writing is charming, elegant, guaranteed to inform, and sure to intrigue.

Mr. Christian's central theme is his participation in a Turing Test contest created by Hugh Loebner and Robert Epstein ([...]), an idea originated by the British computer genius Alan Turning. Turning proposed that a computer is intelligent when a person (a "judge") typing and receiving notes both from another person and from a computer cannot tell which correspondent is the human. Each year since 1991, the Loebner Prize has been awarded to the computer program that best fools the judges. A corresponding prize goes to the most human human; the person, among several, who judges rate most certainly to be a human. Mr. Christian won this award in 2009.

Mr. Christian, more often than not, subordinates his description of the contest itself to the subtitle of his book -- "What It Means to Be Alive." In short, interrelated sections that show his intense preparation for the Loebner competition, he relates computer contexts and our daily lives. I particularly liked his treatment of the concept "book" as applied to Gary Kasparov's chess match with IBM's Deep Blue Computer algorithm. Chess, as played by man and machine, includes openings and endings that can be "memorized" -- this is the "book" -- the previous established series of chess moves that humans and machines store in their memories. Thus, oftentimes, it is only in the middle game that chess skills come into play. Mr. Christian wonderfully shows us how the "book" concept is of general human importance, concluding, "And the book, for me, becomes a metaphor for the whole of life." He similarly wows readers with his discussion of data compression.

No less interesting are his other tales and insights. For example, he retells the story of Professor Kevin Warwick of the University of Reading who, in the late 1990s and early 2000s, had various electronic devices implanted in his arm. Among these devices, the professor used active ultrasonic sensors to mimic sonar as his sixth sense -- he could "feel" objects without touching them. With another implanted device, Warwick remotely communicated with his wife who also had electronic implants: this was the first ever purely electronic communication conducted between two human nervous systems. Beyond these few examples, Mr. Christian enlightens us as to how computer programs have trouble with "barge-in" conversations, why "apricot" and "prescient" have the same root, and more.

Although Mr. Christian doesn't explicitly draw the conclusion, one can infer from his writing that Alan Turing was wrong. The Turning Test seems unable to provide more than a superficial evaluation of intelligence. A machine with no "life," body, history, or actual experiences seems quite unable ever to convince us that it possesses a true intellect by winning this sort of contest.

Still, if the Turing Test is ultimately a poor barometer of computer capability, the greater question remains: "can machines ever become humanly intelligent? Mr. Christian barely offers his opinion on this matter, only writing near the very end that, "Some people imagine the future as a kind of heaven... [e.g. Ray Kurzweil] ... Others ... as a kind of hell," [e.g. The Matrix]. I'm no futurist, but I ... think of ... AI as a kind of purgatory: the place where the flawed, good-hearted go to be purified -- and tested -- and to come out better on the other side."

I, and most probably other readers, would have liked more such commentary, to know what Mr. Christian thinks about humankind's future in the face of rising machine intelligence. This is an under-appreciated concern that deserves our awareness.

Interestingly, the 2009 Loebner Prize competition was a perfect opportunity to focus our attention. The other winner that year -- the person who won the most human computer award -- was David Levy, who also wrote Love + Sex with Robots, which I use it in my Queens College, CUNY Sociology course Posthuman Society. Levy argues that by 2050, humans will be conversing with, forming social relations with, having sex with, and perhaps even marrying with autonomous robots. Surely, if this happens -- and Levy's strong credentials make him a credible prognosticator -- we will be forced to conclude that machines have become intelligent, no matter how strange or imperfect their programming may seem. And with this, humankind's future will be forever changed -- I don't think for the better -- even if we survive the experience. Of course, Levy could be wrong. Producing the advanced robots that he envisions may require too enormous an effort, if it's even possible.

But I don't think Levy is wrong. The New York Times (8/16/11), for example, reports that Stanford University will offer a free online course in AI this fall that is taught by two leading experts. More than 58,000 people worldwide have already registered for the course, which was only advertised virally. Why such great interest? Because people are curious, in part, but also because NASA needs intelligent robots to explore space. Our military has deployed intelligent machines to fight in Afghanistan. Business wants smart robots to manufacture cheaper and better goods. Google is spearheading the production of robotically driven cars. Japan seeks intelligent robots to care for its aging population. And, sharing love and sex with machines is already well underway. Smart robots are going to solve many human problems but also create others, with dramatic consequences, a future that I believe is inevitable.

That said, my comments should in no way detract from Brian Christian's marvelous book. He is a gifted informative writer with a keen eye for the human condition. I look forward with great anticipation to curling up with his next provocative volume.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars The problem with the Turing test 7 Oct. 2011
By Massimo Pigliucci - Published on Amazon.com
Format: Kindle Edition Verified Purchase
[This is an excerpt from a full review to appear in Skeptical Inquirer] Mathematician Alan Turing is famous for a number of things, but probably the one that comes most easily to mind is the famous Turing test, a simple procedure for allegedly determining whether a computer is thinking like a human being -- or at least, whether a computer can effectively fool us into such a conclusion. Turing predicted that by the year 2000 computers would be able to trick human judges into thinking they were talking to a fellow human instead of a machine at least 30% of the time, if the conversation lasted for about five minutes. This has always seemed to me to put the bar so low as to make the entire enterprise spectacularly uninteresting. Sure enough, reading Brian Christian's The Most Human Human confirmed my impression that the so-called Turing test is one of the most hyped ideas in both artificial intelligence and philosophy of mind. The issue, as Christian makes abundantly clear throughout the book, is not whether programmers can devise a clever enough trick that can fool some people some of the time (and for a short period at that), but whether it is possible, or even if it makes sense to try, to equip computers with something akin to human intelligence and thought (please notice that I do not subscribe to non-physicalist views of human consciousness). Christian seems convinced that the key to artificial intelligence is to be found in the implications of Shannon's information theory, which deals among other things with the compression of semantic content. As Christian puts it at the end of the book: "If a computer could ... compress English optimally, it'd know enough about the language that it would know the language. We'd have to consider it intelligent -- in the human sense of the word" (emphasis in the original). Well, is some sense of knowing and intelligence this may be true. But would we have succeeded in creating an artificial intelligence substantially analogous to the human variety? Would that computer be conscious of knowing the English language? There are serious reasons to doubt it. More likely, we would have created something different, and we might need to broaden our very understanding of what "thinking" means.
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