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Message   VRSS    All   Margaret Boden, Philosopher of Artificial Intelligence, Dies At   August 15, 2025
 8:20 AM  

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Title: Margaret Boden, Philosopher of Artificial Intelligence, Dies At 88

Link: https://slashdot.org/story/25/08/15/0050241/m...

An anonymous reader quotes a report from the New York Times: Margaret Boden,
a British philosopher and cognitive scientist who used the language of
computers to explore the nature of thought and creativity, leading her to
prescient insights about the possibilities and limitations of artificial
intelligence, died on July 18 in Brighton, England. She was 88. Her death, in
a care home, was announced by the University of Sussex, where in the early
1970s she helped establish what is now known as the Center for Cognitive
Science, bringing together psychologists, linguists, neuroscientists and
philosophers to collaborate on studying the mind. Polymathic, erudite and a
trailblazer in a field dominated by men, Professor Boden produced a number of
books -- most notably "The Creative Mind: Myths and Mechanisms" (1990) and
"Mind as Machine: A History of Cognitive Science" (2006) -- that helped shape
the philosophical conversation about human and artificial intelligence for
decades. "What's unique about Maggie is that she's a philosopher who has
informed, inspired and shaped science," Blay Whitby, a philosopher and
ethicist, said on the BBC radio show "The Life Scientific" in 2014. "It's
important I emphasize that, because many modern scientists say that
philosophers have got nothing to tell them, and they'd be advised to look at
the work and life of Maggie Boden." Professor Boden was not adept at using
computers. "I can't cope with the damn things," she once said. "I have a Mac
on my desk, and if anything goes wrong, it's an absolute nightmare."
Nevertheless, she viewed computing as a way to help explain the mechanisms of
human thought. To her, creativity wasn't divine or a result of eureka-like
magic, but rather a process that could be modeled and even simulated by
computers. "It's the computational concepts that help us to understand how
it's possible for someone to come up with a new idea," Professor Boden said
on "The Life Scientific." "Because, at first sight, it just seems completely
impossible. God must have done it." Computer science, she went on, helps us
"to understand what a generative system is, how it's possible to have a set
of rules -- which may be a very, very short, briefly statable set of rules --
but which has the potential to generate infinitely many different
structures." She identified three types of creativity -- combinational,
exploratory and transformational -- by analyzing human and artificial
intelligence.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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