Can computers be social?
(2002) 5th International Conference on Computing Anticipatory Systems 627. p.95-106- Abstract
- Of main concern in agent based computing is the conception that software agents can attain socially responsible behavior. This idea has its origin in the need for agents to interact with one another in a cooperating manner. Such interplay between several agents can be seen as a combinatorial play where the rules are fixed and the actors are supposed to closely analyze the play in order to behave rational. This kind of rationality has successfully being mathematically described. When the social behavior is extended beyond rational behavior, mere mathematical analysis falls short. For such behavior language is decisive for transferring concepts and language is a holistic entity that cannot be analyzed and defined mathematically. Accordingly,... (More)
- Of main concern in agent based computing is the conception that software agents can attain socially responsible behavior. This idea has its origin in the need for agents to interact with one another in a cooperating manner. Such interplay between several agents can be seen as a combinatorial play where the rules are fixed and the actors are supposed to closely analyze the play in order to behave rational. This kind of rationality has successfully being mathematically described. When the social behavior is extended beyond rational behavior, mere mathematical analysis falls short. For such behavior language is decisive for transferring concepts and language is a holistic entity that cannot be analyzed and defined mathematically. Accordingly, computers cannot be furnished with a language in the sense that meaning can be conveyed and consequently they lack all the necessary properties to be made social. The attempts to postulate mental properties to computer programs are a misconception that is blamed the lack of true understanding of language and especially the relation between formal system and its semantics. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/1407265
- author
- Ekdahl, Bertil LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2002
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- beliefs, social behavior, social agents, agent, multiagent systems
- host publication
- Computing Anticipatory Systems (AIP Conference Proceedings)
- volume
- 627
- pages
- 95 - 106
- publisher
- American Institute of Physics (AIP)
- conference name
- 5th International Conference on Computing Anticipatory Systems
- conference location
- Liege, Belgium
- conference dates
- 2001-08-13 - 2001-08-18
- external identifiers
-
- wos:000178624500009
- ISSN
- 0094-243X
- 1551-7616
- ISBN
- 0-7354-0081-4
- DOI
- 10.1063/1.1503673
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 7cd90911-d55e-4d2e-b428-a431ddbb8fd1 (old id 1407265)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-01 12:30:23
- date last changed
- 2021-05-06 16:29:09
@inproceedings{7cd90911-d55e-4d2e-b428-a431ddbb8fd1, abstract = {{Of main concern in agent based computing is the conception that software agents can attain socially responsible behavior. This idea has its origin in the need for agents to interact with one another in a cooperating manner. Such interplay between several agents can be seen as a combinatorial play where the rules are fixed and the actors are supposed to closely analyze the play in order to behave rational. This kind of rationality has successfully being mathematically described. When the social behavior is extended beyond rational behavior, mere mathematical analysis falls short. For such behavior language is decisive for transferring concepts and language is a holistic entity that cannot be analyzed and defined mathematically. Accordingly, computers cannot be furnished with a language in the sense that meaning can be conveyed and consequently they lack all the necessary properties to be made social. The attempts to postulate mental properties to computer programs are a misconception that is blamed the lack of true understanding of language and especially the relation between formal system and its semantics.}}, author = {{Ekdahl, Bertil}}, booktitle = {{Computing Anticipatory Systems (AIP Conference Proceedings)}}, isbn = {{0-7354-0081-4}}, issn = {{0094-243X}}, keywords = {{beliefs; social behavior; social agents; agent; multiagent systems}}, language = {{eng}}, pages = {{95--106}}, publisher = {{American Institute of Physics (AIP)}}, title = {{Can computers be social?}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1503673}}, doi = {{10.1063/1.1503673}}, volume = {{627}}, year = {{2002}}, }