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Review - Donald Mitchie: on Machine Intelligence, Biology & More - Ashwin
Srinivasan (ed.)
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This is an
eclectic collection of writings by and about Donald Michie, the
Scottish-born scientist whose career spanned over half a century
and covered many topics, most notably computer science and
reproductive biology. Michie died in a car accident in 2007,
aged 84, and "Machine Intelligence" is a tribute to his life and
work compiled by the eminent computer scientist Ashwin Srinivasan.
The book varies widely in style and subject matter, but it is
interesting and readable throughout. It comes in three parts,
"Machine Intelligence," "Biology," and "Science and Society."
Each section is divided into chapters containing 3-5 pieces, with
helpful introductions to the chapters by Srinivasan.
The writing is aimed at the non-specialist reader, and specialists
may be disappointed by the absence of any of Michie's many
ground-breaking scientific papers. The upside is that experts
and novices alike are treated to insider accounts of Michie's
code-breaking at Bletchley Park during WWII, reflections by Michie
on how scientists work and the role of government in science, and
thoughtful discussions of big topics in AI - such as the Turing
test and the role of subconscious or "inarticulate" thought in
cognition. Especially worthwhile are Michie's thoughts on the
difference between brute-force solutions to computing problems and
truly intelligent solutions.
Michie was much more than a scientist, and some of the most witty
and enjoyable writing in the book sees Michie as science
administrator, social commentator, and popular science writer.
Some of my favourites are his cutting comments on the Lighthill
Report (the government report in the early 1970s that almost killed
Britain's nascent AI industry), his article about the reading
habits of scientists (they do surprisingly little), and his account
of a bizarre trek from London to Moscow that Michie undertook at
the height of the Cold War.
"Machine Intelligence" is not a detailed or systematic treatment of
Michie's ideas - it's a series of snapshots rather than a portrait.
Articles on the same theme (like the difference between clever and
intelligent computers) are sometimes scattered through the book
rather than grouped together. And there are too many
typographical errors. But "Machine Intelligence" succeeds as
a readable tribute to a remarkable man, giving many glimpses of
Michie's insight, humour, and wide-ranging enthusiasm for science.
Only in hardback
Review by Michael Bycroft
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Last update 05 June 2007