The Glass Cage : How Our Computers Are Changing Us
The Glass Cage : How Our Computers Are Changing Us
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Author(s): Carr, Nicholas
ISBN No.: 9780393351637
Pages: 288
Year: 201509
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 24.27
Status: Out Of Print

"Nicholas Carr is among the most lucid, thoughtful, and necessary thinkers alive. He's also terrific company. should be required reading for everyone with a phone." -- Jonathan Safran Foer "Artificial intelligence has that name for a reason-it isn't natural, it isn't human. As Nicholas Carr argues so gracefully and convincingly in this important, insightful book, it is time for people to regain the art of thinking. It is time to invent a world where machines are subservient to the needs and wishes of humanity." -- Don Norman, author of Things that Make Us Smart and Design of Everyday Things, director of the University of California San Diego Design Lab "Engaging, informative …Carr deftly incorporates hard research and historical developments with philosophy and prose to depict how technology is changing the way we live our lives." -- Publishers Weekly "Most of us, myself included, are too busy tweeting to notice our march into technological dehumanization.


Nicholas Carr applies the brakes for us (and our self-driving cars)." -- Gary Shteyngart, author of Little Failure "Carr brilliantly and scrupulously explores all the psychological and economic angles of our increasingly problematic reliance on machinery and microchips to manage almost every aspect of our lives. A must-read for software engineers and technology experts in all corners of industry as well as everyone who finds himself or herself increasingly dependent on and addicted to gadgets." -- Booklist, Starred Review "Fresh and powerful." -- Mark Bauerlein (Weekly Standard) "Nick Carr is the rare thinker who understands that technological progress is both essential and worrying. is a call for technology that complements our human capabilities, rather than replacing them." -- Clay Shirky, author of Here Comes Everybody and Cognitive Surplus "A sobering new analysis of the hazards of intelligent technology." -- Hiawatha Bray (Boston Globe) "A stimulating, absorbing read.


" -- Michelle Scheraga (Associated Press) "An elegantly written history of what role robotics have played in our past, and the possible role that they may play in our future… urges us to take a moment, to take stock, and to realize the price that we're paying-if not right this second, then certainly at some point in the future-in order to live a life that's made easier by technology." -- Elisabeth Donnelly (Flavorwire) "Helps us appreciate why so-called gains of 'superior results' can come with a steep price of hard-to-see tradeoffs that are no less potent for being subtle and nuanced." -- Evan Seliger (Forbes Magazine) "[A] deeply informed reflection on computer automation." -- G. Pascal Zachary (San Francisco Chronicle) "Smart, insightful… paint[s] a portrait of a world readily handing itself over to intelligent devices." -- Jacob Axelrad (Christian Science Monitor) "Brings a much-needed humanistic perspective to the wider issues of automation." -- Richard Waters (Financial Times) "One of Carr's great strengths as a critic is the measured calm of his approach to his material-a rare thing in debates over technology… Carr excels at exploring these gray areas and illuminating for readers the intangible things we are losing by automating our lives." -- Christine Rosen, Democracy "There have been few cautionary voices like Nicholas Carr's urging us to take stock, especially, of the effects of automation on our very humanness-what makes us who we are as individuals-and on our humanity-what makes us who we are in aggregate.


" -- Sue Halpern (New York Review of Books).


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