Livro: industrial com ilha privada contrata especialista em informática para conversar com seu computador autoconsciente [duplicata]

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No momento, estou tentando encontrar o nome de um livro que não era muito antigo e que li há cerca de 10 anos. Tinha um industrial super genial, que me lembrou de Bill Gates, que contratou uma especialista em computadores para vir investigar seu supercomputador que estava se tornando autoconsciente. Sua grande empresa e casa estavam em uma ilha e ele tinha seu próprio porto de foguetes. Ele iria colher asteróides e o governo enviou os militares para tentar impedi-lo.

    
por user2609404 01.10.2015 / 08:03

1 resposta

Sua pergunta me faz lembrar de esta velha pergunta . A resposta para essa pergunta foi Sociedade da Mente por Eric L. Harry . Uma resenha no Google Livros :

Society of the Mind is the story of Dr. Laura Aldridge, a young Harvard psychology professor who is offered a seven-figure sum for a week of unspecified consultation by enigmatic inventor and computer genius Joseph Gray. Unknown to all but Gray's immediate staff, his prized invention and alter-ego - a massive, artificially intelligent neurocomputer - lies buried deep underground; its "mind" has grown troubled and its wide-ranging errors cause for grave concern. When Laura meets Gray on his south Pacific island, she is shocked - but intrigued - when she learns exactly what her job entails: to psychoanalyze and "cure" Gray's aberrant mainframe, which has become all too human in its operation, before its malfunctions lead to global catastrophe. But what Gray has built is not only a thinking entity; it feels as well. A conscious, brilliant, neurotic, and lonely mind that looks out at the world through cameras, interacting with it by way of the faltering steps of inquisitive, childlike robots, the neurocomputer shares its world with Laura when she immerses herself in Gray's virtual-reality workstations. And the closer Laura gets to the crux of the neurocomputer's psychological problems, the more engaging and "talkative" it becomes - until it begins to have trouble keeping its inventor's potentially devastating secrets. Utterly riveting, Society of the Mind raises questions that are chillingly real: As computer scientists succeed in replicating the human mind, what happens when they mistakenly - or perhaps intentionally - replicate its psychotic tendencies as well? And if the virus of human madness can be caught by computers, can the contagion pass from computers back to man?

    
01.10.2015 / 08:41