"The book, delightful reading throughout, belongs to the meeting-of-the-minds genre of writing ... intelligent
summation.... Highly recommended."
--V. V. Raman, Choice
"Casti's lively table talk gives the reader a well-paced introduction to many of the basic issues in machine
intelligence.... Casti is quite accomplished at parsing complex ideas for the reader ... the conversation provokes
and stimulates. By the time "Cigars and Brandy" arrive, readers will feel well served and satisfied."
--Publishers Weekly
"Witty, fast-paced, engaging, and always riveting, this book makes science come alive as five intellectual
titans leap from the page to spar with one another in our living rooms. It's as if we had a ring-side seat to witness
the clash of great ideas. These historical figures reveal not only the ideas that changed our view of the universe,
they also reveal their basic humanity. A delightful read!"
--Michio Kaku, author of Visions: How Science Will Revolutionize the Twenty-First Century and Hyperspace
"The date is 1949, the venue is Christ's College, Cambridge, and guess who's coming to dinner? The guests
are some of the greatest intellects to have twisted their minds around the problem of making machines that think.
John Casti has invented an evening of spirited over-dinner argument to unveil the problems faced by machine intelligence.
A new way to explain science and an intellectual feast in every sense."
--John D. Barrow, Author of The Artful Universe
Perseus Books Group Web Site, March, 2001
Summary
In this narrative tour de force, gifted scientist and author John L. Casti contemplates an imaginary evening
of intellectual inquiry-a sort of "My Dinner with" not Andre, but five of the most brilliant thinkers
of the twentieth century. Imagine, if you will, one stormy summer evening in 1949, as novelist and scientist C.
P. Snow, Britain's distinguished wartime science advisor and author of The Two Cultures, invites four singular
guests to a sumptuous seven-course dinner at his alma mater, Christ's College, Cambridge, to discuss one of the
emerging scientific issues of the day: Can we build a machine that could duplicate human cognitive processes? The
distinguished guest list for Snow's dinner consists of physicist Erwin Schrodinger, inventor of wave mechanics;
Ludwig Wittgenstein, the famous twentieth-century philosopher of language, who posited two completely contradictory
theories of human thought in his lifetime; population geneticist/science popularizer J.B.S. Haldane; and Alan Turing,
the mathematician/codebreaker who formulated the computing scheme that foreshadowed the logical structure of all
modern computers. Capturing not only their unique personalities but also their particular stands on this fascinating
issue, Casti dramatically shows what each of these great men might have argued about artificial intelligence, had
they actually gathered for dinner that midsummer evening.
With Snow acting as referee, a lively intellectual debate unfolds. Philosopher Wittgenstein argues that in order
to become conscious, a machine would have to have life experiences similar to those of human beings-such as pain,
joy, grief, or pleasure. Biologist Haldane offers the idea that mind is a separate entity from matter, so that
regardless of how sophisticated the machine, only flesh can bond with that mysterious force called intelligence.
Both physicist Schrodinger and, of course, computer pioneer Turing maintain that it is not the substance, but rather
the organization of that substance, that makes a mind conscious.
With great verve and skill, Casti recreates a unique and thrilling moment of time in the grand history of scientific
ideas. Even readers who have already formed an opinion on artificial intelligence will be forced to reopen their
minds on the subject upon reading this absorbing narrative. After almost four decades, the solutions to the epic
scientific and philosophical problems posed over this meal in C. P. Snow's old rooms at Christ's College remains
tantalizingly just out of reach, making this adventure into scientific speculation as valid today as it was in
1949.
Table of Contents
Prologue: The Story Begins
The Sherry: An Evening at Christ's
The Soup: Brains and Machines
The Fish: Minds and Machines
The Meat: Meaning and Machines
The Salad: Language and Thought
The Dessert: Life and Personhood
The Cigars and Brandy: Social Behavior, Culture and Thought