Skip to:Content
|
Bottom
Cover image for Mind, machine, and morality : toward a philosophy of human-technology symbiosis
Title:
Mind, machine, and morality : toward a philosophy of human-technology symbiosis
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
London, UK : Ashgate, 2009
Physical Description:
xvi, 184 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
ISBN:
9780754673583

Available:*

Library
Item Barcode
Call Number
Material Type
Item Category 1
Status
Searching...
30000010206290 T14 H85 2009 Open Access Book Book
Searching...
Searching...
30000010206289 T14 H85 2009 Open Access Book Book
Searching...

On Order

Summary

Summary

Technology is our conduit of power. In our modern world, technology is the gatekeeper deciding who shall have and who shall have not. Either technology works for you or you work for technology. It shapes the human race just as much as we shape it. But where is this symbiosis going? Who provides the directions, the intentions, the goals of this human-machine partnership? Such decisions do not derive from the creators of technology who are enmeshed in their individual innovations. They neither come from our social leaders who possess only sufficient technical understanding to react to innovations, not to anticipate or direct their progress. Neither is there evidence of some omnipotent 'invisible hand,' the simple fact is that no one is directing this enterprise. In Mind, Machine and Morality, Peter Hancock asks questions about this insensate progress and has the temerity to suggest some cognate answers. He argues for the unbreakable symbiosis of purpose and process, and examines the dangerous possibilities that emerge when science and purpose meet. Historically, this work is a modern-day child of Bacon's hope for the 'Great Instauration.' However, unlike its forebear, the focus here is on human-machine systems. The emphasis centers on the conception that the active, extensive face of modern philosophy is technology. Whatever we are to become is bound up not only in our biology but critically in our technology also. And to achieve rational progress we need to articulate manifest purpose. This book is one step along the purposive road. Drawing together his many seminal writings on human-machine interaction and adapting these works specifically for this collection, Peter Hancock provides real food for thought, delighting readers with his unique philosophical perspective and outstanding insights. This is theoretical work of the highest order and will open minds accordingly.


Author Notes

Peter A. Hancock is Provost Distinguished Research Professor in the Department of Psychology, the Institute for Simulation and Training, and the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the University of Central Florida. Previously, he was the founder and Director of the Human Factors Research Laboratory at the University of Minnesota where he held appointments in the Departments of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Psychology, and Kinesiology as well as at the Cognitive Science Center and the Center on Aging Research. He currently holds as an Adjunct Senior Research Scientist at the Transportation Institute of the University of Michigan. His work has garnered over $15 million dollars in externally funded research awards and he is the author of more than 600 refereed scientific articles and publications as well as writing and editing a number of books. He has received various awards for his work, among them the Franklin V. Taylor Award of the American Psychological Association, the Liberty Mutual Medal from the International Ergonomics Association, the Jack Kraft Award of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society and the Sir Frederic Bartlett Medal of the Ergonomics Society of Great Britain for lifetime achievement. In 2006 he was named the Norbert Wiener Award winner of the IEEE Systems, Man, and Cybernetics Society, its highest technical award. Peter is a Fellow, and past President, of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society.


Reviews 1

Choice Review

What are we to make of technology? Does the Baconian dictum apply? Hancock (Univ. of Central Florida), a leading human factors engineering researcher, examines the forefront of technological innovation. He points out that humanity's technical abilities have progressed to the point that the data scientists obtain in their research is so dependent on machinery that it is scarcely possible to call it human knowledge any longer. What does this mean for our future? Will scientists be able to create thinking machines? And given this, what direction should these (and many other) technologies take? Hancock argues that scientists/researchers on the front lines of this work should be intimately involved in laying out the possibilities and setting moral parameters for their creation and use. He is quite elegant in his argument that given the nature of emerging technologies, this move is crucial. Though it is hard not to share his concern, the history of science shows that humanity has not followed this sensible path in the past and seems unlikely to do so now. Nonetheless, the book is an excellent beginning if society is to change its course at this time. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All levels of undergraduate students, researchers/faculty, professionals, and general readers. B. Mitchell Gibbs College of Boston


Table of Contents

Preface; The science of human factors
Teleology for technology
Convergent technological evolution
The future of function allocation
The sheepdog and the Japanese garden
On the future of work
Men without machines
Life, liberty, and the design of happiness
Mind, machine and morality
References
Go to:Top of Page