The shape of actions: what humans and machines can do Collins, Harry
Publication details: Cambridge MIT Press 1998 Description: xi, 212 pISBN:- 9780262032575
- 620.82
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Ahmedabad | 620.82 C6S4 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 168877 |
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620.80285 E6 Environmental modelling with GIS | 620.8092 E4E6 An environmental odyssey: people, pollution and politics in the life of a practical scientist | 620.82 B2H8 Human performance engineering: a guide for system designers | 620.82 C6S4 The shape of actions: what humans and machines can do | 620.82 K2 Kansei/affective engineering | 620.82 N6D3 The design of everyday things | 621.042 C6E6 Energy and climate change: creating a sustainable future |
Includes bibliographical references (p. [199]-206) and index.
What can humans do? What can machines do? How do humans delegate actions to machines? In this book, Harry Collins and Martin Kusch combine insights from sociology and philosophy to provide a novel answer to these increasingly important questions. The authors begin by distinguishing between two basic types of intentional behavior, which they call Polimorphic actions and mimeomorphicb actions. Polimorphic actions (such as writing a love letter) are ones that community members expect to vary with social context. Mimeomorphic actions (such a swinging a golf club) do not vary. Although machines cannot act, they can mimic mimeomorphic actions. Mimeomorphic actions are thus the crucial link between what humans can do and what machines can do. Following a presentation of their detailed categorization of actions, the authors apply their approach to a broad range of human-machine interactions and to learning. Key examples include bicycle riding and the many varieties of writing machines. They also show how their theory can be used to explain the operation of organizations such as restaurants and armies. Finally, they look at a historical casethe technological development of the air pumpsapplying their categorization of actions to the processes of mechanization and automation. Automation, they argue, can occur only where what we want to bring about can be brought about through mimeomorphic action. (Source: http://mitpress.mit.edu)
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