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In his groundbreaking new book,
John Pollock establishes an outpost at the crossroads where artificial
intelligence meets philosophy.
Specifically,
he proposes a general theory of rationality and then describes its
implementation in OSCAR,
an architecture for an autonomous rational agent he claims is the "first AI
system capable of performing reasoning that philosophers would regard as
epistemically sophisticated."
A sequel to Pollock's How to Build a Person,
this volume builds upon that theoretical groundwork for the implementation of
rationality through artificial intelligence.
Pollock argues that progress in AI has stalled because of its creators'
reliance upon unformulated intuitions about rationality.
Instead,
he bases the OSCAR architecture upon an explicit philosophical theory of
rationality, encompassing principles of practical cognition,
epistemic cognition, and defeasible reasoning.
One of the results is the world's first automated defeasible reasoner capable
of reasoning in a rich, logical environment.
Underlying Pollock's thesis is a conviction that the tenets of artifical
intelligence and those of philosophy can be complementary and mutually
beneficial.
And,
while members of both camps have in recent years grown skeptical of the very
possibility of "symbol processing" AI,
Cognitive Carpentry establishes that such an approach to AI can be
successful.
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