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From: "Jeffrey E." <[email protected]>
To: John Brockman
Subject: Re: The Second Brockman Conference - An Invitation
Date: Thu, 02 Aug 2018 16:21:45 +0000
john the old conferencess did not care about diversity. I suggest you not either. the women are all weak ,
and a distraction sorry, .
On Thu, Aug 2, 2018 at 12:00 PM, John Brockman < > wrote:
HERE'S THE MOST RECENT UPDATE BELOW. RESPONSE IS BEST EVER - EVERYBODY WANTS
IN. AT THE FARM OR MOBILE
Eastover Farm
325 Guilds Hollow Road, RR 132
Bethlehem, CT 06751
Map
Dear XXX,
In September, 2016, I organized a meeting at a resort in Washington, CT, the purpose of which was to make
sense out of what's happening in Al. The result is the forthcoming collection titled POSSIBLE MINDS: 25
WAYS OF LOOKING AT AI, scheduled for publication by Penguin Press on February, 19th.
I am writing to invite you to the second "Brockman Conference" which will be held at Winvian Farm
(winvian.com) in Mont, CT September 7th-9th.
The participants in the book are Chris Anderson, Rodney Brooks, George M. Church, Daniel C. Dennett,
David Deutsch, Anca Dragan, George Dyson, Peter Galison, Neil Gershenfeld, Alison Gopnik, Tom Griffiths,
Danny Hillis, Caroline A. Jones, David Kaiser, Seth Lloyd, Hans Ulrich Obrist, Judea Pearl, Sandy Pentland,
Steven Pinker, Venki Ramakrishnan, Stuart Russell, Jaan Tallin, Max Tegmark, Frank Wilczek, and Stephen
Wolfram.
Stewart Brand, in his jacket blurb, nicely frames the project: "Intelligences born and intelligences made have a
lot to offer each other. For that beneficial blend to occur, the contextual framing that the voices in this book
spell out will be crucial."
Here is a pdf of the 1st pass galleys of the book (confidential please until publication date).
WHEN
5pm Friday, September 7th — Sunday noon, September 9th
WHERE
At the beautiful high-end resort, Winvian Farm (winvian.com), a 5-star Relais & Chateaux resort hotel in
Morris, CT, six miles from Eastover Farm. Even though I've been there for dinner numerous times, I had no
idea what a unique place it is. Their accommodations consist of cottages, each with a unique theme and
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architectural design. For example, one is an actual interior of a Sikorsky helicopter; another is a treehouse,
with ladder, etc. (See hups://www.winvian.com/cottages/?) We have a block of rooms at Winvian and also at
the nearby Lichtfield Inn reserved for Friday and Saturday nights. We will pick up transportation and room
costs.
RSVP
Apologies for the tight deadline, but the hotel has a very appealing conference space can accommodate a
maximum of 22 people. In order to secure the space and blocks of rooms, I need responses from participants
by the end of this week.
AGENDA
(IMPORTANT NOTE: The entire event will be videotaped and in this regard there are 22 seats at the
conference table for the speaker-participants only. Chairs will be available on the side, off camera, for
observers, significant others, etc.)
The agenda of the Second Brockman Conference is to explore a plan to update the highly influential Macy
Conferences of the 1940s and 1950s.
It's interesting to note that we periodically find ourselves in a situation in which empirical developments in
science run into an epistemological wall, and we have to step back and rethink the framework we have
constructed to make sense of the world and our place in it. Consider the developments during the 1930s-
1940s: Gliders Incompleteness Theorems (1931); Turing's "On Computable Numbers, With An Application
To The Entscheidungsproblem" (1936); Bateson's theory of "Schismogenesis" in Naven (1936); Rosenblueth,
Weiner & Bigelow's "Behavior, Purpose and Teleology" (1943); McCullouch & Pitts's "A Logical Calculus of
the Ideas Immanent in Nervous Activity" (1943); von Neumann's book Theory of Games and Economic
Behavior (with Oskar Morgenstern) 1944; Shannon's "A Mathematical Theory of Communication" (1948);
Wiener's Cybernetics (1948).
A result of this dazzling array of new ideas was the creation of The Macy Conferences of the 1940s and 1950s.
The original participants wanted to create a new social science for their time and, in so doing, asked people in
various disciplines to talk and interact with each other. Participants included a who's who of cutting edge
scientific intellectuals: H. Ross Ashby, Gregory Bateson, Julian H. Bigelow, Warren McCulloch, Margaret
Mead, F.S.C. Northrop, Walter Pitts, Arturo Rosenthbleuth, John Von Neumann, Claude Shannon, Heinz Von
Foerster, W. Grey Walter, Norbert Wiener, and J.Z. Young.
McCulloch, as Chairman, presided over the sessions and decided who to invite and what they should talk
about. von Foerster, as Secretary, was the driving force of the project. It was McCulloch who insisted over
Norbert Wiener's objections that "mind" be introduced into the mix, and for this, he recruited Gregory Bateson
and Margaret Mead. The disciplines represented over the decade ranged across economics, electrical
engineering, biology, chemistry, medical research, neuroscience, philosophers, physics, physiology, psychiatry,
and zoology.
The ambition for their agenda seems remarkable but not when you consider it in the context of WWII and the
post-Cold War and nuclear threat. Interestingly, although people look at cybernetics as a necessary defense
effort, the people involved were almost all deeply humanistic while at the same time being erudite and leaders
in their respective scientific disciplines. (For examples of the interdisciplinary aspect of the Macy Conference,
see selected title of talks below.)
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Also, have a look at the pdf at the link below of a small portion of the mammoth 770-page book on
proceedings of the Macy Conferences (which actually includes only half of the conferences) which includes
the Introduction to the book, the participants page for each of the Conferences covered, and the Introductory
Discussion of the 1949 Conference. Click here to read on a computer or tablet screen (5MB); click here for hi-
def version to print (25MB).
WHO
In addition to the essayists in POSSIBLE MINDS, I have invited a few additional extraordinary thinkers:
Danny Kahneman (thinking), Robert Axelrod (game theory), David Chalmers (philosophy), and Demis
Hassibis (computation), the first three of which to date have agreed to attend and to chair a session on their
topics.
NOTE: There are 22-seats at the conference table and I am holding the last one for you, as well as a cottage at
Winvian, but, again, I need a response by the end of this week.
CONFIRMED PARTICIPANTS
John Brockman
Katinka Matson
Robert Axelrod
Rodney Brooks
David Chalmers
George Church
Freeman Dyson
George Dyson
Peter Galison
Neil Gershenfeld
Alison Go nik
Tom Griffiths
W. Daniel Hillis
Jennifer Jacquet
Daniel Kahneman
Caroline Jones
Seth Lloyd
Sandy Pentland
Frank Wilczek
Stephen Wolfram
INVITED
Demis Hassibis (possible)
Ian McEwan
I am very excited about this project and your participation is important. Join us!!
Best,
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JB
John Brockman
mobile
SELECTED MACY CONFERENCE TALKS
The Psychological Moment in Perception
John Stroud
The Neurotic Potential and Human Adaptation
Lawrence S. Kubie
Quantum Mechanical Theory of Memory
Heinz von Foerster
Quantum Mechanical Theory of Memory
Heinz von Foerster
Sensory Prosthesises
Norbert Wiener
The Manner in Which and Extent to Which Speech
Can Be Distorted and Remain Intelligible
L.C.R.Licklider
The Redundancy of English
Claude E. Shannon
Experience in Learning Primitive Languages Through the
Use of Learning High Level Linguistic Abstractions
Margaret Mead
On the Development of Word Meanings
Heinz Werner
The Development of Language in Early Childhood
John Stroud
Body Symbolization and Development of Language
Lawrence S. Kubie
Communication Pattems in Problem-Solving Groups
Alex Bavelas
Communication Between Sane and Insane: Hypnosis
Lawrence S. Kubie
Communication Berween Animals
Herbert C. Birch
Presentation of a Maze-Solving Machine
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Claude Shannon
In Search of Basic Symbols
Donald M. MacKay
The Position of Humor in Human Communication
Gregory Bateson
The Place of Emotions in the Feedback Concept
Lawrence S. Kubie
Homeostasis
W. Ross Ashby
Discrimination and Learning in Octopus
J. Z. Young
Mechanical Chess Player
W. Ross Ashby
Investigations on Synaptic Transmission
Walter Pits
Studies on Activity of the Brain
W. Grey-Walter
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