What are the best Artificial Intelligence Books?

ai books

Best Artificial Intelligence Books

 

Today, artificial intelligence has swept the world. The use of artificial intelligence is improving our lives. It helps us to make strides in our business operations. Artificial intelligence is now being tested by almost all businesses worldwide for various purposes.

The future of economic development and technology is everything. Computer systems, in particular, are devices that simulate human intelligence. Learning, thinking, and self-correction are all involved in this. As a result, career opportunities for programmers and engineers working with Al have increased. Once qualified, students enrolled in AI courses can apply for Al employment. In this post, we’ll list 10 AI books for experts and newcomers to help them advance their understanding.

 

Top 7 books for AI

Here are the top 7 books that you must refer to if you want to excel in AI –

1. The Alignment Problem by Brian Christian

Artificial intelligence is being trusted with more and more real-world responsibilities in our homes, hospitals, schools, and financial institutions. As we build more complicated AI systems whose judgement and values we don’t directly control or comprehend, how can we ensure they align with our own?

The “alignment problem” in AI is examined in this book, from its scientific foundations to its philosophical implications. The book’s description of inverse reinforcement learning and its potential for developing reliable AI systems are fascinating.

Parenting and the alignment issue are highly similar, as Christian notes: “The story of human civilization has always been about how to instil ideals in bizarre, foreign, human-level intelligence who will ultimately take the reins of society from us—namely, our progeny.”

2. Rebooting AI by Gary Marcus and Ernest Davis

A controversial figure in the field of artificial intelligence is Gary Marcus. He is a vocal and steadfast critic of the big data and deep learning-based AI paradigm that currently holds sway. He frequently criticises deep learning for lacking robustness and common sense, contending that traditional symbolic methods must be used in the future of AI.

Whether you agree with Marcus, he deserves to be taken seriously. (After all, Geoff Hinton and his deep learning peers were for many years underrepresented.)

Marcus’ main arguments on the state of AI today are briefly summarised in Rebooting AI. Reading it is highly recommended. According to John Stuart Mill, “He who understands just his side of the subject knows nothing of that.”

3. Homo Deus by Yuval Noah Harari

After penning the best-selling book Sapiens, which describes the evolution of humanity across time from apes to super-intelligent beings, Yuval Noah Harari—a historian, philosopher, and professor in the Department of History at the University of Jerusalem—contains his quest for the future.

He argues in his book Homo Deus that the desires of humanity to achieve perfect pleasure, immortality, and godlike skills will grow, leading to a range of possible futures. Will humans soon be controlled by machines? Man, will he be worshipped as God? The book’s central argument is that it will lead to separating our intelligence from our emotions. If you want to do a little philosophical pondering and thinking, read this book since Harari dives extensively into philosophical subjects like consciousness, human emotions, and uniqueness.

4. Four Futures by Peter Frase

Reading this little, creative, little-known book is intriguing, especially if you appreciate thinking about the big picture—the vast picture.

According to the Four Futures theory, automation, climate change, and social injustice will significantly impact human existence and civilization in the twenty-first century. The book offers four alternative scenarios for how these factors will affect society in the coming decades. These potential futures range from the very grim to the more upbeat.

The book focuses on two critical facets of civilisation and artificial intelligence. There is no question that AI will be transformational; whether one is optimistic or pessimistic about its long-term impact, thus we should all be involved. Second, nothing is predetermined; how this technology impacts our world will depend on our choices and the values we prioritise in the following years.

5. The Singularity is near Ray Kurzweil

In his book “The Singularity is Near,” inventor and futurist Ray Kurzweil is credited with popularising the term “Technological Singularity.” Kurzweil has written five best-selling books. The book examines the societal repercussions of intelligent robots in human life and focuses more on the technological aspects of AI than on philosophical issues. It also offers the opportunity to merge with technology and live as a cybernetic being, much like a cyborg (sorry for the Battlestar Galactica joke).

Bill Gates claimed that Ray Kurzweil was the best expert he knew at forecasting the direction of artificial intelligence. His intriguing new book envisions a day when information technology has advanced so swiftly and far that it has allowed humans to overcome biological limitations, changing our existence in ways we cannot yet fathom.

6. Life 3.O by Max Tegmark

Life 3.0 was developed by cosmologist and MIT professor Max Tegmark. Life 1.0 is the outcome of biological evolution, followed by Life 2.0 and Life 3.0, which are the outcomes of cultural and technological progress. It describes how things may err again. However, it does so by providing detailed examples with real-life elements and by outlining precise preventative measures.

In this book, you will learn about Prometheus, a super-intelligent AI agent capable of producing ground-breaking technologies, managing global resources effectively, and even creating new machines, which was used by a company named Omega to conquer the world. Nobody knew that AI was at work when all of this was done. That is how the narrative starts. Consider this to be plausible. I can say that it did for me.

7. Superintelligence by Nick Bostrom

Professor Nick Bostrom’s book Superintelligence is the one on AI security. Bostrom speculates on the risks of building artificial intelligence far superior to what is now possible. He wonders what may go wrong and whether superintelligence might displace humans as the dominant lifeform on Earth.

He said, “I was particularly impressed by the analogy of people to gorillas. Does it follow that if humans have a more significant influence on gorilla fate than they do, AI will also substantially influence the human future? Another good philosophical study on AI creates more problems than it resolves (which is how it should be).”

 

Final words

In various industries, including corporate firms, public businesses, education, the arts, health care, government services, and the military, one can pursue a career in artificial intelligence. The use of artificial intelligence is growing every day. Therefore, those who can translate digital data into meaningful human conclusions will be able to pursue a very fulfilling career in this field.

 

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