Schedule of Topics

October 6

Introduction

Questions

  • What concerns bring me to the course?
  • What do I anticipate will be said?
  • What relevant opinions do I already hold?
  • What do I expect to do with what I learn?

Assigned Reading

  • Fernando Flores and Michael Graves, Reading a Text, 1-11. Berkeley, California: Logonet, Inc., 1985.
  • Winograd and Flores, Our Path (Chapter 1).
    Readings from Winograd and Flores are from the textbook, Understanding Computers and Cognition, Addison-Wesley, 1987.
  • Lawrence Fisher, Fernando Flores Wants to Make You an Offer, strategy+business magazine, November 24, 2009.

October 13

Paradigms

Questions

  • What relevance do paradigms have for ways of thinking outside of organized science?
  • What paradigms am I trained in and at what levels?
  • What paradigms shape my approach to computers and cognition?

Assigned Reading

  • Thomas Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1962.
    • Chapter II: The Route to Normal Science, 10-22
    • Chapter VI: Anomaly and the Emergence of Scientific Discoveries, 52-65.

Additional Resources and Readings

The Rationalistic Tradition

Assigned Reading

Additional Resources and Readings

October 20

Hermeneutics

Assigned Reading

  • Winograd and Flores, Understanding and Being (Chapter 3)

Additional Resources and Readings

  • Hans Georg Gadamer, Sections from Philosophical Hermeneutics.
  • On Gadamer and the similarities between his hermeneutics and developments in Anglo-American philosophy and cognitive science, especially that of Donald Davidson:
    • Rorty, Richard, Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1979. Parts II & III.
    • Dasenbrock, Reed W. (ed.), Literary Theory After Davidson, University Park: Pennsylvania University Press, 1993.
    • Davidson, Donald, Radical Interpretation, Dialectica, 27 (1973): 314–28
  • Michael Reddy, The conduit metaphor: A case of frame conflict in our language about language. (A. Ortony, Ed.) Metaphor and Thought, Cambridge University Press, 1993, 164-201.

Phenomenology

Assigned Reading

  • Hubert Dreyfus, Being-in-the-World, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1992 [29]
    • "Introduction, Why study Being and Time", 1-9
    • (Optional) "Chapter 1, Heidegger's Substantive Introduction", 10-29
    • The structure of the world, from Chapter 3: Worldiness, 91-107

Additional Resources and Readings

Term paper

  • Monday, October 26, by email to the teaching staff : A one page description of a proposed topic. More information

October 27

Mind and Metaphor

Questions

  • What is the relationship between metaphors, paradigms, and world-views
  • What metaphors do I use preferentially?
  • Do paradigms create a language? Are they made up of language?
  • Do paradigms/metaphors shape action, or are they constituted by actions?

Assigned Reading

  • George Lakoff and Mark Johnson, Metaphors We Live By, University of Chicago Press, 1980. Chapter 21, New Meaning, 139-146. [8]
  • George Lakoff and Mark Johnson, Philosophy in the Flesh: Embodied Mind and its Challenge to Western Thought, Basic Books, 1999. Chapter 3, The Embodied Mind, 16-43. [28]
  • George Lakoff, Cognitive Semantics, in Eco et al., Meaning and Mental Representations, Indiana U Press, 1988, 119-154

Additional Resources and Readings

Language

Assigned Readings

  • Winograd and Flores, Language, listening, and commitment (Chapter 5).

Additional Resources and Readings

  • Jorge Luis Borges, The Analytical Language Of John Wilkins. Translated from the Spanish 'El idioma analítico de John Wilkins' by Lilia Graciela Vázquez; edited by Jan Frederik Solem with assistance from Bjørn Are Davidsen and Rolf Andersen.

November 3

Cognition and Biology

Assigned Reading

  • Winograd and Flores, Cognition as a Biological Phenomenon (Chapter 4, 38-53) [16]
  • Andy Clark, Being There: Putting Brain, body, and World Together Again, Bradford/MIT Press, 1997, Chapter 4, Collective Wisdom, Slime-Mold-Style, 71-82. [12]

Additional Resources and Readings

Tangible and Embodied Computing

Assigned Reading

Additional Resources and Readings

  • E.M. Forster, The Machine Stops (referenced by Dreyfus)
  • Sherry Turkle, Life on the Screen
  • Lindsy Van Gelder The Strange Case of the Electronic Lover See comment below.
  • Robert D. Putnam Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2000)
  • Philip Auslander, Liveness (from Erica)
  • Tools Are Body Parts to Brain. Scientific American. June 23, 2009.
  • S.R. Klemmer, B. Hartmann, and L. Takayama, How bodies matter: five themes for interaction design. Proceedings of the 6th conference on Designing Interactive systems, University Park, PA, USA: ACM, 2006, pp. 140-149.
  • On the potential advantages of telepresence and virtual reality:
    • J. Hollan and S. Stornetta, Beyond being there, Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems, Monterey, California, United States: ACM, 1992, pp. 119-125.
    • J.N. Bailenson, N. Yee, J. Blascovich, A.C. Beall, N. Lundblad, and M. Jin, The use of immersive virtual reality in the learning sciences: Digital transformations of teachers, students, and social context, Journal of the Learning Sciences, vol. 17, 2008, pp. 102–141.

November 10

Commitment and Identity

Assigned Reading

Additional Resources and Readings

  • Harriet Rubin, The Power of Words (Fast Company article about Flores, 1998)
  • Katherine Streeter, Being and Overtime San Francisco Magazine 1997 about Flores.
  • Action Technologies
  • Flores, F., Graves, M., Hartfield, B., & Winograd, T. (1988). Computer systems and the design of organizational interaction. ACM Trans. Inf. Syst., 6(2), 153-172. doi: 10.1145/45941.45943

Dinner with Fernando Flores

November 17

Essentialist Critique of AI

Assigned Reading

  • John Searle, Minds, Brains, and Programs from Haugeland (ed.), Mind Design, Bradford Books, 1981, 282-306. [25]
  • Terry Winograd, Understanding, Orientations, and Objectivity, Chapter from Preston and Bishop (eds.) Views into the Chinese Room - New Essays on Searle and Artificial Intelligence, Oxford Univ. Press 2002. Note: this link is to a pre-final draft of the chapter which contains an extended dialog with the editors that was not in the printed version.

Additional Resources and Readings

  • Dennett on what a system really having beliefs, understanding, etc., involves:
  • John Searle, Minds, Brains and Science, Harvard U. Press, 1986
  • Preston and Bishop (eds.) Views into the Chinese Room - New Essays on Searle and Artificial Intelligence, Oxford Univ. Press 2002.
  • Related analysis of the Turing Test: Donald Davidson, Turing's test, Modelling the Mind, 1990, pp. 1-11. Reprinted in his Problems of Rationality.

Further Topic To Be Announced

December 1

Phenomenological Critique of Representation & AI

Assigned Reading

Additional Resources and Readings

  • Terry Winograd, Thinking machines: Can there be? Are We?, in James Sheehan and Morton Sosna, eds., The Boundaries of Humanity: Humans, Animals, Machines, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991 pp. 198-223. [26]
  • Hubert and Stuart Dreyfus, Making a mind vs. modeling the brain: Artificial intelligence back at a branchpoint, 15-43. Daedalus, 117:1, Winter 1988. [29]
  • An Exchange on Artificial Intelligence by Hubert L. Dreyfus, John Haugeland, Bernard Williams. In response to Williams' review of Dreyfus' book What Computers Can't Do.
  • John Haugeland's essay Mind Embodied and Embedded (in: Having Thought, Harvard University Press 1998) argues against both Cartesian dualism and Simon's view of the mind as a symbolic information processing system. En route we encounter Brooks' subsumption architecture, Gibson's affordances and Dreyfus' notion of meaning.
  • Rod Brooks' Elephants Don't Play Chess is an excellent indictment of classical AI. Also see his publications page.
  • AI and Feminist theory: Alison Adam, Artificial Knowing: Gender and the Thinking Machine, Routledge, 1998

Dinner with Hubert Dreyfus

December 8

Paper Presentations