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Inventing Intelligence: A Social History of Smart

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ISBN: 978-1-405-15230-3

May 2008

Wiley-Blackwell

280 pages

Description
What is intelligence? What makes humans Homo sapiens — the intelligent species?Inventing Intelligence is a bold deconstruction of the history of intelligence. Uncoupling our understanding of this most familiar concept from its traditional social science moorings, this book trains a cultural studies lens on intelligence to expose it as yet another form of representation.

Inventing Intelligence charts the history of intelligence from its earliest articulations through to postmodern AI. Individual chapters recount the loving spheres of divine intelligence imagined by Plato, the self-conscious stylings of the Renaissance Man, the politics of intelligence in the Enlightenment, as well as contemporary assessments of digital intelligence and the mysterious adventure of Einstein’s brain. Ambitious in its historical sweep, unflinching in its challenge to conventional wisdom, Inventing Intelligence is for everyone and anyone who used to think that the parameters and the stakes of intelligence—evident in the current controversy over “intelligent” design—had been negotiated and finalized.

About the Author
Paul Michael Privateer is Associate Professor of Humanities at Arizona State University. He is the author of Romantic Voices: Identity and Ideology in British Literature, 1789-1850 (1991).
Features

  • Charts the history of “intelligence” in a bold and provocative way.
  • Exposes the idea of intelligence as a form of representation, through a masterful cultural study of the concept.
  • Recounts in modern terms the development of intelligence from Plato through the Renaissance and Enlightenment, and contemporary views about digital intelligence and Einstein.