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limits-of-computation

The argument that despite computers' power, there are tasks they ought not to perform, highlighting a fundamental difference between human judgment and machine calculation.

1 chapter across 1 book

Computer Power and Human Reason (1976)Joseph Weizenbaum

Full Text

This chapter serves as the introductory material and front matter for Joseph Weizenbaum's "Computer Power and Human Reason," including the editor's note, dedication, contents, preface, and the beginning of the introduction. The preface outlines the book's central thesis that computers are metaphors for human reasoning and that there are fundamental differences between humans and machines, especially regarding tasks computers should not perform. The introduction begins with a philosophical reflection on the mechanization of human thought and the implications of scientific outlooks on freedom and human agency.