2016年6月19日 星期日

Herbert Simon...Jorge Luis Borges




這篇寫得很不錯。記住,20世紀末, Herbert Simon的辦公室內,即有繪畫和音樂的人工智能軟體。現在.....


文中說他寫的書達20本,最有名的是{管理行為} (拙譯蒙 Herbert Simon列入書單。)
1977 年,陳之藩到 MIT 研究人工智慧,對電腦的未來有了具體想像。「我現在不大愛看的,恐怕是幾年後電腦在半秒鐘即可解決的問題;而我愛看的,是一百年以後電腦依然無法下手的。」陳之藩在《一星如月》中說,「回溯起來,羅素上千頁的《數學原理》的成百定理不是由六十年代的電腦五分鐘就解決了好多嗎?可是羅素的散文,還是清澈如水,在人類迷惑的叢林的一角,閃著幽光。」
C評論: 陳的年代弄錯了,是50年代,不是60年代。羅素最了不起的是思想/文章清楚。

我也可以講講他與Jorge Luis Borges 的訪談、互動:

“A book is not an isolated being: it is a relationship, an axis of innumerable relationships”


―from FICCIONES by Jorge Luis Borges



Introduction
1.  Buenos Aires to Palermo
2.  Geneva and Spain
3.  Buenos Aires, the Avant-garde and Literary Friendships
4.  The 1930s, Crisis and Accident
5.  The 1940s, War, Peronism and Writing
6.  From Blindness to Geneva
References
Bibliography
Acknowledgements
Photo Acknowledgements

224 pages | 20 halftones | 5 x 7-7/8 | © 2006

“Through the years, a man peoples a space with images of provinces, kingdoms, mountains, bays, ships, islands, fishes, rooms, tools, stars, horses and people. Shortly before his death, he discovers that the patient labyrinth of lines traces the image of his own face.”

These words, inseparably marrying Jorge Luis Borges's life and work, encapsulate how he interwove the two throughout his legendary career. But the Borges of popular imagination is the blind, lauded librarian and man of letters; few biographers have explored his tumultuous early life in the streets and cafes of Buenos Aires, a young man searching for his path in the world.  In Jorge Luis Borges, Jason Wilson uncovers the young poet who wrote, loved, and lost with adventurous passion, and he considers the later work and life of the writer who claimed he never created a character other than himself. As Borges declared, “It’s always me, subtly disguised.”

Born in Buenos Aires in 1899, Borges was a voracious reader from childhood, perhaps in part because he knew he lived under an inescapable sentence of adult-onset blindness inherited from his father. Wilson chronicles Borges’s life as he raced against time and his fated blindness, charting the literary friendships, love affairs, and polemical writings that formed the foundation of his youth. Illuminating the connections running between the biography and fictions of Borges, Wilson traces the outline of this self-effacing literary figure.

Though in his later writings Borges would subjugate emotion to the wild play of ideas, this bracing book reminds us that his works always recreated his life in subtle and delicate ways. Restoring Borges to his Argentine roots, Jorge Luis Borges will be an invaluable resource for all those who treasure this modern master. 

不知何故,The Economist 的  Herbert Simon 網路訃聞 2001.2.22,竟然少了第一段:




Herbert Simon
Herbert Simon, artificial intelligence pioneer, died on February 9th, aged 84
 Feb 22nd 2001 | From the print edition








AP/Carnegie Mellon University/Mike Haritan


The idea of such a marvellous machine had been around for centuries. René Descartes (1596-1650), whose philosophy was bound up with mathematics, wondered whether a machine could be made to think; but generally the notion was considered as unlikely as turning iron into gold, another fantasy that occupied great minds. Now here was Mr Simon disturbing his class on a sleepy afternoon in Chicago in 1957 with his improbable claim for computers.


At that time the computer was chiefly famous for having been invented by the British to decode enemy messages in the second world war. High-tech in the world at large was not much more than the electric typewriter. But for several years Mr Simon had been examining whether a computer could match the process of human thought. As a test, he showed that a computer could quickly provide a proof of theorems in “Principia Mathematica”, a key 20th-century work on logical theory. Bertrand Russell, one of the book's authors, said a trifle testily that he wished he had known what “can now be done by machinery” before he had “wasted ten years doing it by hand.”


But can artificial intelligence, AI as insiders call it, really be dignified with, well, “intelligence”? Is this what Descartes had in mind when he wrote, “I think, therefore I am”? A machine will deliver a bar of chocolate in return for a coin, provided it is working, but not even a child believes it is a thinking instrument. A computer is a machine, however intricate. Is it no more than a number cruncher? For more than 40 years Mr Simon was regularly interrogated about his claim that there was little difference between a suitably programmed computer and the human brain's use of neurons. He usually answered questions with good grace, but he refused to give ground.

Obvious once you know

In 1978, Herbert Simon was awarded the Nobel prize for economics. What for many people would be regarded as the culmination of a life's work, Mr Simon took almost casually, a diversion. The Swedish judges at the presentation ceremony were a touch hurt to hear that artificial intelligence had been his central interest, rather than economics, although of course he was interested in that discipline too. But to those who knew him such versatility was no great surprise. He dabbled in many things, usually with great accomplishment. What he called “social science” took a hold on him, but he could probably have made a career as a pianist or a painter.


His parents were German immigrants who, like many before them, had settled in Milwaukee. While still at university he had a part-time job with Milwaukee's local authority and became interested in how the administration made budget decisions, or choices as Mr Simon preferred to call them. Years later “Administrative Behaviour” was the subject of his doctorate, and later still the dissertation was turned into a book of the same name, probably the best known of Mr Simon's 20 books. It was his ideas on decision-making, especially in business, that caught the eye of the Nobel judges.


Like many economic theories, Mr Simon's seems obvious once you know it. In taking a decision, he said, no business could process satisfactorily all the “zillion things” affecting the marketing of a product, in the hope that the right answer for maximising profit would pop out at the end.


That was classical economic theory, he said, but it was “a ridiculous view of what goes on”. Rather, a business tried to make a decision that was “good enough”. He called his theory “bounded rationality” and invented a name to describe it: “satisficing”, a composition of the words satisfy and suffice. Not all economists agreed with Mr Simon. “But they are mistaken,” he said.


His views on economics tied in with his ideas on artificial intelligence. Even a computer displayed its intelligence by making choices, he said. Like a human, a chess computer would analyse the consequences of a move, but it would do better than even a grandmaster, who would be unlikely to see beyond eight moves ahead. But what about insight? Or indeed wisdom and creativity? Mr Simon tended to be dismissive of such vague human terms. His computers had created drawings, which he was happy to display in his office, and music, which musicians said had aesthetic interest. They had made choices, as a human artist or musician would.


For many people, artificial intelligence suggests Hal, the worryingly clever human-like computer which rebelled in the film “2001”. Although Mr Simon sometimes seemed to suggest that a Hal was just around the corner, he was not going to be drawn into comparisons with science fiction. His strictly scientific aims, he said, were limited to using computers to understand how humans think, and as an aid to human thinking. What about the soul? No one, he said, would tell him what the soul was. When someone did, he said thoughtfully, he would program one.

From the print edition: Obituary

沒有留言: