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Wise Animals review: Exploring the entwined worlds of humans and tech

As AI advances daily, a timely and wide-ranging book explores our past, present and future relationship with the technology that co-evolved with us

By Sandrine Ceurstemont

21 February 2024

SHIBUYA, TOKYO, JAPAN-April 15, 2018: Crowds crossing Shibuya scramble crossing, the famous intersection in Tokyo out side Shibuya station, at night.; Shutterstock ID 1088019044; purchase_order: -; job: -; client: -; other: -

Every part of our lives is a result of humans co-evolving with tech

Shutterstock/interstid


Tom Chatfield (Pan Macmillan)

IN 1770, inventor Wolfgang von Kempelen claimed to have created a machine that could skilfully play chess against human opponents. Known as the Mechanical Turk, his contraption defeated many challengers, including Napoleon Bonaparte and Benjamin Franklin, and caused much amazement and debate about how it worked. It was eventually exposed as a hoax, however, with a human chess master hiding inside.

The Mechanical Turk raises intriguing questions about how humans perceive technology, says philosopher in Wise Animals: How…

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