Life on the ScreenSimon and Schuster, 26 avr. 2011 - 352 pages Life on the Screen is a book not about computers, but about people and how computers are causing us to reevaluate our identities in the age of the Internet. We are using life on the screen to engage in new ways of thinking about evolution, relationships, politics, sex, and the self. Life on the Screen traces a set of boundary negotiations, telling the story of the changing impact of the computer on our psychological lives and our evolving ideas about minds, bodies, and machines. What is emerging, Turkle says, is a new sense of identity—as decentered and multiple. She describes trends in computer design, in artificial intelligence, and in people’s experiences of virtual environments that confirm a dramatic shift in our notions of self, other, machine, and world. The computer emerges as an object that brings postmodernism down to earth. |
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Page 7
... Robot 77 4. Taking Things at Interface Value 102 5. The Quality of Emergence 125 6. Artificial Life as the New Frontier 149 III. ON TIHE INTERNET 7. Aspects of the Self 177 8. TinySex and Gender Trouble 210 9. Virtuality and Its ...
... Robot 77 4. Taking Things at Interface Value 102 5. The Quality of Emergence 125 6. Artificial Life as the New Frontier 149 III. ON TIHE INTERNET 7. Aspects of the Self 177 8. TinySex and Gender Trouble 210 9. Virtuality and Its ...
Page 10
... robot insects, and researchers who are trying to build artificial two-year-olds. Biological children, too, are in the story as their play with computer toys leads them to speculate about whether computers are smart and what it is to be ...
... robot insects, and researchers who are trying to build artificial two-year-olds. Biological children, too, are in the story as their play with computer toys leads them to speculate about whether computers are smart and what it is to be ...
Page 12
... robot") running in the MUD that may serve as their alter egos, able to make small talk or answer simple questions. In the course of a day, players move in and out of the active game space. As they do so, some experience their lives as a ...
... robot") running in the MUD that may serve as their alter egos, able to make small talk or answer simple questions. In the course of a day, players move in and out of the active game space. As they do so, some experience their lives as a ...
Page 16
... robot could play. I myself have made this kind of mistake several times, assuming that a person was a program when a charaaer's responses seemed too automatic, too machine-like. And sometimes bots are mistaken for people. I have made ...
... robot could play. I myself have made this kind of mistake several times, assuming that a person was a program when a charaaer's responses seemed too automatic, too machine-like. And sometimes bots are mistaken for people. I have made ...
Page 75
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Table des matières
9 | |
29 | |
The Triumph of Tinkering | 50 |
Of DREAMS ANCI BEASTS | 77 |
ON TIHE INTERNET | 177 |
Identity Crisis | 255 |
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A-Life able aesthetic agents alive Apple II artificial intelligence Barry says become behavior biology Blind Watchmaker brain bricolage called charaaer character cognitive complex computational objects computer culture computer program computer psychotherapy computer's connectionism conversation create creatures culture of simulation cyberspace DEPRESSION 2.0 described electronic ELIZA emergent emotional example experience feel gender human idea identity images information processing interaction Internet Julia says kind LambdaMOO language lives look machine Macintosh mind Minsky models modernist MUDs multiple notion personal computers physical play players postmodern psychoanalytic psychological psychotherapy puter question relationships response robots Rodney Brooks role rules screen sense sexual Seymour Papert Sherry Sherry Turkle SimLife social StarLogo Stewart story student style talk theory therapist therapy things thought tion traditional Turing Turing test Turkle understand users video games virtual communities virtual reality Weizenbaum Windows woman writing York