Superminds The surprising power of people and computers thinking together

Thomas W. Malone

Book - 2018

"If you're like most people, you probably believe that humans are the most intelligent animals on our planet. But there's another kind of entity that can be far smarter: groups of people. In this groundbreaking book, Thomas Malone, the founding director of the MIT Center for Collective Intelligence, shows how groups of people working together in superminds--like hierarchies, markets, democracies, and communities--have been responsible for almost all human achievements in business, government, science, and beyond. And these collectively intelligent human groups are about to get much smarter. Using dozens of striking examples and case studies, Malone shows how computers can help create more intelligent superminds simply by conn...ecting humans to one another in a variety of rich, new ways. And although it will probably happen more gradually than many people expect, artificially intelligent computers will amplify the power of these superminds by doing increasingly complex kinds of thinking. Together, these changes will have far-reaching implications for everything from the way we buy groceries and plan business strategies to how we respond to climate change, and even for democracy itself. By understanding how these collectively intelligent groups work, we can learn how to harness their genius to achieve our human goals. "--Publisher's description.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Little, Brown and Company 2018.
Language
English
Main Author
Thomas W. Malone (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
viii, 376 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 333-362) and index.
ISBN
9780316349130
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • Part I. What Are Superminds?
  • 1. Would You Recognize a Supermind If You Saw It on the Street?
  • 2. Can a Group Take an Intelligence Test?
  • Part II. How Can Computers Help Make Superminds Smarter?
  • 3. How Will People Work with Computers?
  • 4. How Much General Intelligence Will Computers Have?
  • 5. How Can Groups of People and Computers Think More Intelligently?
  • Part III. How Can Superminds Make Smarter Decisions?
  • 6. Smarter Hierarchies
  • 7. Smarter Democracies
  • 8. Smarter Markets
  • 9. Smarter Communities
  • 10. Smarter Ecosystems
  • 11. Which Superminds Are Best for Which Decisions?
  • Part IV. How Can Superminds Create More Intelligently?
  • 12. Bigger Is (Often) Smarter
  • 13. How Can We Work Together in New Ways?
  • Part V. How Else Can Superminds Think More Intelligently?
  • 14. Smarter Sensing
  • 15. Smarter Remembering
  • 16. Smarter Learning
  • Part VI. How Can Superminds Help Solve Our Problems?
  • 17. Corporate Strategic Planning
  • 18. Climate Change
  • 19. Risks of Artificial Intelligence
  • Part VII. Where Are We Headed?
  • 20. Hello, Internet, Are You Awake?
  • 21. The Global Mind
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Malone, the founding director of the MIT Center for Collective Intelligence, asks us to rethink our definition of intelligence. We normally associate intelligence with people, animals, or lately machines; but there is, the author says, another kind of intelligence: the collective intelligence of people or people and computers working together. These superminds, Malone suggests, have been responsible for many of the important developments in human history (like democracy), and now, with the advent of artificial intelligence, superminds are poised to take on even greater importance. Malone works through the history of superminds to show us humanity's future: a future where collective intelligences are capable of the kind of complex thinking that science-fiction writers have been imagining for decades, where machines and people join together in a kind of symbiosis, each drawing on the other's unique attributes, each amplifying the other's skills. It's an energizing book, filling the reader with a sense of wonder and hope for the future.--Pitt, David Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review

Malone (founding director, MIT Ctr. for Collective Intelligence; Patrick J. McGovern Professor of Management, MIT; The Future of Work) presents a captivating analysis of the remarkable capacity for intelligence exhibited by "superminds," or groups of people and computers working together. He defines superminds as individuals acting together in ways that seem intelligent, and collective intelligence as the property that any supermind has, or that arises when superminds collaborate. He reminds readers that the history of humanity is largely the history of human superminds, of how people together accomplished more than any individual could have done alone. He also details how crucial computers will be for the superminds of the future to perform the complex kinds of thinking that humans do today. Malone's lofty work, while rich in speculation, blends exciting new science, many years of research, and numerous case studies to predict a bold new world. It nicely complements Steven Pinker's Enlightenment Now, Daniel Coyle's The Culture Code, and Geoff Mulgan's Big Mind. VERDICT Essential for university libraries supporting graduate curriculum in psychology, political science, business, and computer science, and for erudite fans of social, emotional, and collective intelligence.-Dale Farris, Groves, TX © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Forget artificial intelligence. Instead, think collective intelligence, putting "AI in combination with humans who provide whatever skills and general intelligence the machines don't yet have themselves."It's not so much that the machines are going to supplant us, writes Malone (Management/MIT; The Future of Work, 2004), the director of the MIT Center for Collective Intelligence. It's that machines aren't quite capableyetof thinking in ways that humans do, just as machines can perform calculations that it would take generations of human thinkers to complete. Add IT to human brainpower, and you've got a supermindwith the operative notion being that the machines are aids to a collective of human thinkers who illustrate, in case after case, that "almost all of our important problems are solved by groups of people, rather than by individuals alone." While individual intelligence is importantand, writes Malone, intelligence tests are the best predictors of success in a broad range of human endeavorsit's the pulling together that's significant. Moreover, while smart people are certainly a desideratum, what counts more in powerful collective intelligence is "social perceptiveness," a matter in which women typically score higher than men. The author enumerates the cognitive processes that go into an intelligent system, including, importantly, the ability to learn from experience, which is perhaps not as widespread a talent as we might wish. That learning, in turn, may inspire platform revolutions. After all, Malone suggests, now that we're used to the ease of buying books and toothpaste online, why shouldn't we be able to shop for spinal surgery in the same way, so that "if consumers don't get what they want from their current doctors' offices, they're likely to go to other superminds in the market for medical services." The possibilities are endless.A book rich in speculation about how collective thinking might solve big problems such as climate change; of interests to fans of Daniel Dennett, Steven Pinker, and other big-picture thinkers. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.