智力的象征科学

S. Dasgupta
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1972年,卡内基梅隆大学的艾伦·纽维尔和赫伯特·西蒙合著的《人类问题解决》(Human Problem Solving)一书,长达900多页,是纽维尔、西蒙和他们众多同事(最著名的是兰德公司(Rand Corporation)天才程序员克里夫·肖(Cliff Shaw))对“人类如何思考”的17年研究的总结。当然,“人类如何思考”在历史上属于心理学家的领地。但是纽厄尔和西蒙所说的“理解”项目的意思是……在1958年这两个人在著名的《心理学评论》上发表了一篇关于人类解决问题的论文之前,心理学家们对这个问题的设想是非常不同的。的确,专业的心理学家一定会用怀疑的眼光看待他们。两人都没有接受过正式的心理学训练。纽厄尔原本是一名数学家,西蒙则是一名政治学家。他们都蔑视学科界限。他们的简历大声宣告了他们在知识上的异端。在《人类问题解决》出版的时候,Newell的研究兴趣跨越了人工智能、计算机架构,以及后来被称为认知科学的东西(我们将会看到)。西蒙的多学科创造力——他被称为“文艺复兴时期的人”——涵盖了行政理论、经济学、社会学、认知心理学、计算机科学和科学哲学——在20世纪70年代初几乎处于神话般的地位。然而,对于一位著名的心理学历史学家来说,纽维尔和西蒙的所作所为似乎与这门学科毫无关系:乔治城大学心理学家丹尼尔·n·罗宾逊的《心理学思想史》(1995)第三版没有提到纽维尔和西蒙。正如纽维尔和西蒙所解释的那样,这可能是因为他们对思维的研究采用了一种明确的信息处理视角。信息处理:这样计算机就进入了对话。但是,纽厄尔和西蒙赶紧澄清,他们并不是在把人比喻成计算机。相反,他们会提出一种信息处理系统(IPS),用来描述和解释人类如何“处理面向任务的符号信息”。换句话说,在他们看来,人类解决问题就是将信息表示为符号并对其进行处理。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Symbolic Science Of Intelligence
Human Problem Solving (1972) by Allen Newell and Herbert Simon of Carnegie-Mellon University, a tome of over 900 pages, was the summa of some 17 years of research by Newell, Simon, and their numerous associates (most notably Cliff Shaw, a highly gifted programmer at Rand Corporation) into “how humans think.” “How humans think” of course belonged historically to the psychologists’ turf. But what Newell and Simon meant by their project of “understanding . . . how humans think” was very different from how psychologists envisioned the problem before these two men invaded their milieu in 1958 with a paper on human problem solving in the prestigious Psychological Review. Indeed, professional psychologists must have looked at them askance. Neither was formally trained in psychology. Newell was originally trained as a mathematician, Simon as a political scientist. They both disdained disciplinary boundaries. Their curricula vitae proclaimed loudly their intellectual heterodoxy. At the time Human Problem Solving was published, Newell’s research interests straddled artificial intelligence, computer architecture, and (as we will see) what came to be called cognitive science. Simon’s multidisciplinary creativity—his reputation as a “Renaissance man”—encompassing administrative theory, economics, sociology, cognitive psychology, computer science, and the philosophy of science—was of near-mythical status by the early 1970s. Yet, for one prominent historian of psychology it would seem that what Newell and Simon did had nothing to do with the discipline: the third edition of Georgetown University psychologist Daniel N. Robinson’s An Intellectual History of Psychology (1995) makes no mention of Newell or Simon. Perhaps this was because, as Newell and Simon explained, their study of thinking adopted a pointedly information processing perspective. Information processing: Thus entered the computer into this conversation. But, Newell and Simon hastened to clarify, they were not suggesting a metaphor of humans as computers. Rather, they would propose an information processing system (IPS) that would serve to describe and explain how humans “process task-oriented symbolic information.” In other words, human problem solving, in their view, is an instance of representing information as symbols and processing them.
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