Scott Hutchins
As a character in the book asks, “What is love?” He proceeds to provide at least three alternatives to his own question – a biochemical emergent property of evolution? A social construct? Or just acquisition and deal making involving assets two people have?
In ‘A Working Theory of Love’, Scott Hutchins takes a stab at it through its characters in ways real and artificial. At the centre of it all is Neill Bassett, a resident of San Francisco in his mid-thirties, working at Amiante Systems with two others to build an artificial intelligence that will pass the Turing test. He is not a programmer/technologist – his essential connection with the project is that the machine’s “character” has been built using his father’s personality as manifested through the journals he (the father) had kept. He serves as the interlocutor for the machine as its creators try to make it a sentient, ‘lifelike’ phenomenon. (more…)
