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On the Origin of Objects is the culmination of Brian
Cantwell Smith's decade-long investigation into the philosophical and
metaphysical foundations of computation, artificial intelligence, and
cognitive science. Based on a sustained critique of the formal
tradition that underlies the reigning views, he presents an argument
for an embedded, participatory, "irreductionist," metaphysical
alternative. Smith seeks nothing less than to revise our
understanding not only of the machines we build but also of the world
with which they interact.
Smith's ambitious project begins as a search for a comprehensive
theory of computation, able to do empirical justice to practice and
conceptual justice to the computational theory of mind. A rigorous
commitment to these two criteria ultimately leads him to recommend a
radical overhaul of our traditional conception of metaphysics.
Everything that exists -- objects, properties, life, practice -- lies,
Smith claims, in the "middle distance," an intermediate realm of
partial engagement with and partial separation from, the enveloping
world. Patterns of separation and engagement are taken to underlie a
single notion unifying representation and ontology: that of subjects'
"registration" of the world around them.
Along the way, Smith offers many fascinating ideas: the distinction
between particularity and individuality, the methodological notion of
an "inscription error," an argument that there are no
individualswithin physics, various deconstructions of the
type-instance distinction, an analysis of formality as overly
disconnected ("discreteness run amok"), a conception of the boundaries
of objects as properties of unruly interactions between objects and
subjects, an argument for the theoretical centrality of reference
preservation, and a theatrical, acrobatic metaphor for the contortions
involved in the preservation of reference and resultant stabilization
of objects. Sidebars and diagrams throughout the book help clarify
and guide Smith's highly original and compelling argument.
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