AI as a human artefact: a powerful vision seeking focus

Review by Ivan Uemlianin

David Eliot’s Artificially Intelligent attempts an ambitious synthesis of AI history, technical explanation, surveillance critique, and political economy.  His approach is anchored by a humanistic conviction that artificial intelligence is fundamentally a story about people, institutions, and choices.

The book’s genuine insight emerges in its insistence on AI as socially constructed technology.  Eliot opens not with neural networks or training data but with Muḥammad ibn Mūsā al-Khwārizmī, the ninth-century mathematician whose name gave us “algorithm,” situating computational thinking within specific historical, cultural, and institutional contexts.  He moves through Ada Lovelace’s mathematical education and constrained opportunities, Alan Turing’s wartime desperation and post-war persecution, the Cold War funding structures that shaped early AI research, and the contemporary corporate imperatives driving deployment decisions.  Throughout, the argument is insistent: AI systems encode the values, constraints, and power relations of the people and organizations that produce them.

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Philosophical Thought in Russia in the Second Half of the Twentieth Century: A Contemporary View from Russia and Abroad

Corinna Lotz’ review

Philosophical Thought in Russia in the Second Half of the Twentieth Century edited by Vladislav Lektorsky and Marina Bykova is a ground-breaking book combining recent Russian archival research with inspiring contributions from key thinkers from around the world. Lektorsky and Bykova’s volume has a Tolstoyan breadth of action. This, together with Dostoevskian reflection, makes the volume an epic and absorbing account of philosophy in the Soviet era and beyond.

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