BRIAN CHRISTIAN has published work in The Atlantic, Wired, The Wall Street Journal, and many literary and scientific publications. He has been featured on “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart,” NPR’s “Radiolab,” and “The Charlie Rose Show,” and has lectured at Google, Microsoft, the London School of Economics, and elsewhere. An award-winning poet, Christian holds a degree in philosophy and computer science from Brown University and an MFA in poetry from the University of Washington. The Most Human Human, a Wall Street Journal bestseller, has been translated into nine languages. Christian lives in Philadelphia.
“Terrific. . . . Art and science meet an engaged mind and the
friction produces real fire.”
—The New Yorker
“Illuminating. . . . An irreverent picaresque. . . . What Christian
learns along the way is that if machines win the imitation game as
often as they do, it’s not because they’re getting better at acting
human, it’s because we’re getting worse. . . . As The Most Human
Human demonstrates, Christian has taken his own words to
heart. An authentic son of [Robert] Frost, he learns by going
where he has to go, and in doing so proves that both he and his
book deserve their title.”
—The New York Times Book Review
“Absorbing. . . . Christian covers a great deal of ground with
admirable clarity but with a lightness of touch. . . . He also has
a real knack for summing up key ideas by applying them to real-life
situations. . . . Did Christian become ‘The Most Human
Human’? You’ll have to read the book to find out.”
—The Wall Street Journal
“Exhilarating. . . . Reading it, I constantly found my mind
pinging off of whatever Christian was discussing and into flights
of exploratory speculation about the amount of information encoded
in the seemingly routine exchanges of small talk or the reasons why
it’s much harder to tell a false story in reverse chronological
order. It’s an unusual book whose primary gift lies in distracting
you from itself. I’d like to see the computers come up with
something like that.”
—Salon
“Fascinating.”
—Jon Stewart
“Brilliant.”
—Financial Times
“Humorous and thought-provoking. . . . A curious look into the
history and potential of artificial intelligence, and a brilliant
comparison between artificial intelligence and our natural variety.
. . . Christian wants to call attention to how special we are, and
his book is a success.”
—The Columbus Dispatch
“Excellent.”
—NPR’s “Radiolab”
“Incredibly engrossing.”
—The Onion A. V. Club
“Entertaining and informative.”
—The Economist
“A charming, friendly, and often funny read.”
—The Boston Globe
“Immensely ambitious and bold, intellectually provocative, while at
the same time entertaining and witty—a delightful book about how to
live a meaningful, thriving life.”
—Alan Lightman, author of Einstein’s Dreams and Ghost
“A book exploring the wild frontiers of chat-bots is appealing
enough; I never expected to discover in its pages such an
eye-opening inquest into human imagination, thought,
conversation, love and deception. Who would have guessed
that the best way to understand humanity was to study its
imitators?”
—David Eagleman, author of Sum and Incognito
“Remarkable, enjoyable, heartening. A philosophical joyride
connecting the thoughts of Aristotle with David Brent. . . . The
day that a machine creates work of such wit and originality, we
should all be very worried.”
—The Times (London)
“This is a strange, fertile, and sometimes beautiful book. . . .
Something like this seems to be going on with the computer. Brian
Christian writes with a rare combination of what Pascal took
to be two contrary mindsets: the spirit of geometry and the spirit
of finesse. He takes both the deep limitations and halting
progress of artificial intelligence as an occasion for thinking
about the most human activity—the art of conversation.”
—Matthew B. Crawford, author of Shop Class as Soulcraft
“Lively and thought-stirring. . . . An invaluable sourcebook on
computing in modern-day life.”
—New Statesman
“Fast-paced, witty, and thoroughly winning. . . . This fabulous
book demonstrates that we are capable of experiencing and sharing
far deeper thoughts than even the best computers—and that too often
we fail to achieve the highest level of humanness.”
—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“This is such an important book, a book I’ve been waiting and
hoping for. Machines are getting so smart that it forces us to take
a completely fresh look at what smart is, and at what human is.
Brian Christian takes on this very weighty task, and somehow makes
it fun. Christian is nimble, insightful,
and humble—a very human human, indeed, and one you will
like very much.”
—David Shenk, author of The Forgetting, The Immortal Game, and The
Genius in All of Us
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