ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1989 The Industrialization of Intelligence is a spirited blend of the principles of social science and computer technology. Critically praised in the United States and England by leading lights both literary and technological, it develops an original and provocative model of the interplay between computer systems and social systems.

Noah Kennedy has composed a compelling story from key episodes in the development of the computer, and coupled it with a probing analysis of the true role of automation in modem society. The result firmly plants computer technology in the soil of western culture and denies the shrill claims that the information age represents a sudden break with the historical past.

He starts with biographical vignettes from the lives of five pivotal thinkers, weaving their crucial insights into the larger fabric of contemporary and future society. He then gives a provocative forecast of the role of artificial intelligence in future society, and examines the probable impact of new computer technologies on employment and on the relationships between nations. The result is a reasoned understanding of our imminent future through a thoughtful analysis of our historical past.

chapter 1|17 pages

The Machinery of Self-Love

chapter 2|173 pages

Machinery and Labour

chapter 3|24 pages

The Division of Mental Labour

chapter 4|137 pages

The Laws of Thought

chapter 5|123 pages

Origins of a System

chapter 6|83 pages

Of Little Men and Monsters

chapter 7|13 pages

Systems of Belief, Systems of Production

chapter 8|14 pages

Technology and Employment

chapter 9|32 pages

Human Capital and the Wealth of Nations