UNDER CONSTRUCTION
in the meanwhile
Principal textbooks
1. Russell, S. J., & Norvig, P. (2016).
Artificial intelligence: a modern approach.
This is an updated edition of the 2010 version containing extensive
current references.
[note the book is getting hard to find sometimes due to demand, and its
being the definitive AI textbook. Check the edition you are
using/getting]
2. Sutton, R. S., & Barto, A. G. (2018).
Reinforcement learning: An introduction. MIT Press. This is an
updated (2nd) edition of the 1998 version.
In addition to his University of Alberta academic appointment, Richard
Sutton is now the head of Alphabet/Google DeepMind Alberta operations.
3. Nilsson, N. J., & Nilsson, N. J. (1998). Artificial
intelligence: a new synthesis. Morgan Kaufmann.
4. Poole, D. L., Mackworth, A. K., & Goebel, R. (1998). Computational
intelligence: a logical approach (Vol. 1). New York: Oxford
University Press.
5. see also Artificial Intelligence:
Foundations of Computational Agents 2nd Edition by the same
authors.
Concerning Superintelligence
SI-1. Good, I. J. (1966). Speculations concerning the first
ultraintelligent machine. In Advances in computers (Vol. 6, pp. 31-88).
Elsevier.
Irving John (Jack) Good was mathematician who worked with Alan Turing
and made significant contribution to braking the Enigma codes. One could
regard him as Turings statistician. Good later worked with British AI
pioneer and computer designer Donald Michie. Good devoted much of his
later life to research in Bayesian statistics. Goods paper cited above
was the first to clearly spell out ultraintelligent machines and can be
rightly viewed as the basis of the superintelligence discipline today.
This paper stated
Let an ultraintelligent machine be defined as a machine that can
far surpass all the intellectual activities of any man however clever.
Since the design of machines is one of these intellectual activities,
an ultraintelligent machine could design even better machines; there
would then unquestionably be an 'intelligence explosion,' and the
intelligence of man would be left far behind. Thus the first
ultraintelligent machine is the last invention that man need ever
make, provided that the machine is docile enough to tell us how to
keep it under control
This short paragraph not only presages the idea of superintelligent AI,
it also laid the groundwork for subsequent Paperclip Apocalypse
scenarios and the drive for AI safety considerations. Good was
particularly a credible messenger due to his early intimate and highly
knowledgeable technical familiarity and experience with highly complex
and capable computers.
SI-2. Bostrom, N. (2014). Superintelligence:
Paths, Dangers, Strategies. New York: Oxford University Press.
Bostroms book was much waited by the superintelligence (SI) community,
and in some respects provided the academic sanctioning of runaway-AI
potential for harm, and AI-safety, as legitimate scholarly topics for
discussion. In some ways the runaway SI apocalypse scenarios act to
counterbalance Ray Kurzweils Exponentiality of all things technological
and Singularity visions.
SI-3. Drexler, K.E. (2019):
Reframing Superintelligence: Comprehensive AI Services as General
Intelligence, Technical Report #2019-1, Future of Humanity
Institute, University of Oxford
This is a must read by Eric Drexler, pioneer of nanotechnology . This
report projects a possible, if not likely, trajectory of AI development
that envisions emergence of asymptotically comprehensive,
superintelligent-level AI services. Drexler has been prescient regarding
the importance of and trajectory of nanotechnology.
SI-4.Yampolskiy, R. V. (2015).
Artificial Superintelligence: a futuristic approach. CRC Press.
While maintaining a focus on AI and superintelligence safety, Roman
Yampolskiy brings additional dimensions to discussions of
superintelligence. I am not quite sure why the need to use the term
Artificial in the title and the discussion. Superintelligence is not now
and will never be a normal or natural attribute; I view adding
artificial to superintelligence as redundant.
The book includes interesting and useful discussions on topics such as
AI-Completeness and AI-Hardness, Mind Design and associated taxonomies
of real and speculative mind design space. Most of the intensity and
depth of discussion though is focused on the harm that SI can bring (and
according to the author and many of the references cited, viewed as very
likely to occur.) The detailed references provided are exceptional.
Personally, I would prefer to see more discussion of the positive
aspects of SI and the hard problems it can and should solve first.
SI-5. Philip Larrey (2017), Would Super-Human Machine Intelligence
Really Be Super-Human? in G. Dodig-Crnkovic and R. Giovagnoli (eds.),
Representation and Reality in Humans, Other Living Organisms and
Intelligent Machines , (Studies in Applied Philosophy,
Epistemology and Rational Ethics 28, DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-43784-2_19)
more recommendations to come!
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