Humans dream of super-intelligent machines. But what happens if we actually succeed?
Stuart Russell is a professor of Computer Science and holder of the Smith-Zadeh Chair in Engineering at the University of California, Berkeley, and an Honorary Fellow of Wadham College, University of Oxford. He has advised Number 10 and the United Nations about the risks of AI. In 1990, he received the Presidential Young Investigator Award of the National Science Foundation, in 1995 he was co-winner of the Computers and Thought Award and in 2005 he received the ACM Karlstrom Outstanding Educator Award. He is the author (with Peter Norvig) of Artificial Intelligence- A Modern Approach, the Number One bestselling textbook in AI which is used in over 1,300 universities in 118 countries around the world. He was born in England and lives in Berkeley.
Surely the most important book on AI this year.
*The Guardian, Book of the Day*
A brilliantly clear and fascinating exposition of the history of
computing thus far, and how very difficult true AI will be to
build.
*The Spectator*
Fascinating and significant.
*The Sunday Times*
Worth reading Human Compatible by Stuart Russell (he's great!)
about future AI risks and solutions.
*Twitter*
A thought-provoking and highly readable account of the past,
present and future of AI . . . Russell deploys a bracing
intellectual rigour . . . but a laconic style and dry humour keep
his book accessible to the lay reader.
*The Financial Times*
It's asking a lot of a book about the potential end of civilisation
to be strewn with humour and wry asides, but this is what Russell
manages . . . it's worth sticking with, for the sake of the
species.
*The Guardian*
An excellent, nuanced history.
*The Telegraph, Best New Science Books for Christmas*
Russell is an assiduous and conscientious scholar ... [he] provides
a wealth of information. This is one of those intellectual voyages
where both the journey and the destination matter.
*The Literary Review*
This is the most important book I have read in quite some time. It
lucidly explains how the coming age of artificial
super-intelligence threatens human control. Crucially, it also
introduces a novel solution and a reason for hope.
*Daniel Kahneman, winner of the Nobel Prize and author of
'Thinking, Fast and Slow'*
Of the many books published this year on artificial intelligence,
this is probably the best. Stimulating and scary stuff.
*The Financial Times*
A must-read: this intellectual tour-de-force by one of AI's true
pioneers not only explains the risks of ever more powerful
artificial intelligence in a captivating and persuasive way, but
also proposes a concrete and promising solution.
*Professor Max Tegmark, MIT, author of 'Life 3.0'*
Stuart Russell has long been the most sensible voice in computer
science on the topic of AI risk. And he has now written the book
we've all been waiting for. Human Compatible is a brilliant and
utterly accessible guide to what will be either the best or worst
technological development in human history.
*Sam Harris, author of five New York Times bestsellers and host of
the Making Sense podcast*
Human Compatible made me a convert to Russell's concerns with our
ability to control our upcoming creation -- super-intelligent
machines. Unlike outside alarmists and futurists, Russell is a
leading authority on AI. His new book will educate the public about
AI more than any book I can think of, and is a delightful and
uplifting read.
*Judea Pearl, Turing Award-winner and author of 'The Book of
Why'*
Stuart Russell, one of the most important AI scientists of the last
25 years, may have written the most important book about AI so far,
on one of the most important questions of the 21st century: How to
build AI to be compatible with us. The book proposes a novel and
intriguing solution for this problem, while offering many
thought-provoking ideas and insights about AI along the way. An
accessible and engaging must-read for the developers of AI and the
users of AI - that is, for all of us.
*Chairman and director of McKinsey Global Institute*
The man set on stopping the machines taking over.
*The Telegraph*
In clear and compelling language, Stuart Russell describes the huge
potential benefits of Artificial Intelligence, as well as the
hazards and ethical challenges. It's specially welcome that a
respected leading authority should offer this balanced appraisal,
avoiding both hype and scaremongering.
*Professor Martin Rees, Emeritus Professor of Cosmology and
Astrophysics, University of Cambridge, and author of 'On the
Future'*
A strong case for planning for the day when machines can outsmart
us.
*Kirkus Review*
Persuasively argued and lucidly imagined, Human Compatible offers
an unflinching, incisive look at what awaits us in the decades
ahead. Stuart Russell's diagnosis of the risks and dangers of AI is
convincing, and his prescription for action is compelling. No
researcher has argued more persuasively about the risks of AI, nor
has shown more clearly a pathway forward. Anyone who takes the
future seriously should pay attention.
*Brian Christian, author of 'Algorithms to Live By'*
Can we coexist happily with the intelligent machines that humans
will create? "Yes," answers Human Compatible, "but first..."
Through a brilliant reimagining of the foundations of artificial
intelligence, Russell takes you on a journey from the very
beginning, explaining the questions raised by an AI-driven society
and beautifully making the case for how to ensure machines remain
beneficial to humans. A totally readable and crucially important
guide to the future from one of the world's leading experts.
*Tabitha Goldstaub, co-founder of CognitionX and Head of the UK
Government's AI Council*
The same mix of de-mystifying authority and practical advice that
Dr. Benjamin Spock once brought to the care and raising of
children, Dr. Stuart Russell now brings to the care, raising, and
yes, disciplining of machines. He has written the book that most --
but perhaps not all -- machines would like you to read.
*George Dyson, author of 'Turing's Cathedral' and 'Project
Orion'*
This beautifully written book addresses a fundamental challenge for
humanity: increasingly intelligent machines that do what we ask but
not what we really intend. Essential reading if you care about our
future.
*Professor Yoshua Bengio, Computer Science and Operations Research,
Université de Montréal, winner of the 2018 Turing Award*
A book that charts humanity's quest to understand intelligence,
pinpoints why it became unsafe, and shows how to course-correct if
we want to survive as a species. Stuart Russell, author of the
leading AI textbook, can do all that with the wealth of knowledge
of a prominent AI researcher and the persuasive clarity and wit of
a brilliant educator.
*Jaan Tallinn, co-founder of Skype*
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