Seeming Human

Seeming Human Artificial Intelligence and Victorian Realist Character

Hardback (23 Aug 2018)

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Publisher's Synopsis

Seeming Human: Artificial Intelligence and Victorian Realist Character offers a new theory of realist character through character's unexpected afterlife: the intelligent machine. The book contends that mid-twentieth-century versions of artificial intelligence (AI) offer a theory of verisimilitude omitted by traditional histories of character, which often focus on the development of interiority and the shift from "flat" to "round" characters in the Victorian era. Instead, by reading character through AI, Megan Ward's Seeming Human argues that routinization, predictability, automation, and even flatness are all features of realist characters.
 
Early artificial intelligence movements such as cybernetics, information theory, and the Turing test define ways of seeming-rather than being-human. Using these theories of verisimilitude to read Victorian novelists such as Elizabeth Gaskell, Margaret Oliphant, Anthony Trollope, Thomas Hardy, and Henry James, Seeming Human argues that mechanicity has been perceived as anti-realist because it is the element that we least want to identify as human. Because AI produces human-like intelligence, it makes clear that we must actually turn to machines in order to understand what makes realist characters seem so human.
 

Book information

ISBN: 9780814213759
Publisher: Ohio State University Press
Imprint: The Ohio State University Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 823.809
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Number of pages: 216
Weight: 449g
Height: 229mm
Width: 152mm
Spine width: 14mm