Information Technology Reference
In-Depth Information
exposing the way 'intelligence' is talked about and used, a set of mechanisms have
been identified as the necessary components of intelligence.
What has been discarded is the necessity to rely upon human intelligence as a
fundamental unit of performance. It has been used as the stone in the soup; however,
to recognise intelligence requires the means of sharing the same abstractions and
insights as well as the acknowledgement of purpose. The notion of intelligence has
been extended beyond recognisable thought; there can, for example, be physical
manifestations of the process. This model thus allows us to identify and assess
objectively other potential forms of intelligence systems.
References
Addis T, Addis J (2010) Drawing programs: the theory and practice of schematic functional
programming. Springer, Heidelberg, ISBN 978-1-84882-617-5, e-ISBN 978-1-84882-618-2
Goodwin B (1994) How the leopard changed its spots: the evolution of complexity. Weidenfield &
Nicolson, London
Johnson-Laird PN, Wason PC (1977) Thinking: readings in cognitive science. Cambridge University
Press, London
Shannon CE, Weaver W (1964) ' The mathematical theory of communication'. University of Illinois
Press, Urbana (first published 1949)
Wason PC, Johnson-Laird PN (1968) Thinking and reasoning. Penguin Modern Psychology UPS
11. Penguin Books, London
Search WWH ::




Custom Search