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Apr 2011
ISBN 0262518694
376 pp.
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Inside Jokes
Matthew M. Hurley , Daniel C. Dennett and Reginald B. Adams, Jr.

Some things are funny-jokes, puns, sitcoms, Charlie Chaplin, The Far Side, Malvolio with his yellow garters crossed¿but why? Why does humor exist in the first place? Why do we spend so much of our time passing on amusing anecdotes, making wisecracks, watching The Simpsons? In Inside Jokes, Matthew Hurley, Daniel Dennett, and Reginald Adams offer an evolutionary and cognitive perspective. Humor, they propose, evolved out of a computational problem that arose when our long-ago ancestors were furnished with open-ended thinking. Mother Nature-aka natural selection-cannot just order the brain to find and fix all our time-pressured misleaps and near-misses. She has to bribe the brain with pleasure. So we find them funny. This wired-in source of pleasure has been tickled relentlessly by humorists over the centuries, and we have become addicted to the endogenous mind candy that is humor.

Hurley, Dennett, and Adams describe the evolutionary reasons for humor and for laughter. They examine why humor is pleasurable and desirable, often sharable, surprising, playful, nonsensical, and insightful. They give an "inside," mechanistic account of the cognitive and emotional apparatus that provides the humor experience, and they use it to explain the wide variety of things that are found to be humorous. They also provide a preliminary sketch of an emotional and computational model of humor, arguing that (Star Trek's Data to the contrary) any truly intelligent computational agent could not be engineered without humor.

Table of Contents
 Preface
1 Introduction
2 What Is Humor For?
3 The Phenomenology of Humor
4 A Brief History of Humor Theories
5 Twenty Questions for a Cognitive and Evolutionary Theory of Humor
6 Emotion and Computation
7 A Mind That Can Sustain Humor
8 Humor and Mirth
9 Higher-Order Humor
10 Objections Considered
11 The Penumbra: Nonjokes, Bad Jokes, and Near-Humor
12 But Why Do We Laugh?
13 The Punch Line
 Epilogue
 References
 Index
 
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Psychology, Cognitive Science
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