Thinking AI: How Artificial Intelligence Emulates Human Understanding
By (Author) John MacCormick
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
29th July 2026
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Computer applications in the social and behavioural sciences
Cognitive and behavioural neuroscience
Hardback
272
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
Can a computer program think like a human
"Can machines think" Ever since Alan Turing posed this question in an influential 1950 paper, it has been central to research in artificial intelligence. More than seventy-five years after Turing's paper, we grapple with it every time we wonder if Watson was actually smarter than Jeopardy! champions, or if ChatGPT really knows what it's talking about. In Thinking AI, computer scientist John MacCormick explores Turing's question from a perspective informed by a detailed understanding of the way modern AI systems work. MacCormick explains, in accessible fashion, the ideas behind the two main pillars of the twenty-first century AI revolution: deep neural networks and reinforcement learning.
MacCormick offers a tour of the most famous AI systems, including AlexNet and VGG16, deep neural networks for object recognition that led to a Nobel prize; DeepMind's AlphaGo, which shocked AI researchers with its superhuman performance in the game of Go; and OpenAI's ChatGPT, which stunned the world with its natural language capabilities. He describes how each system works, and points to parallels with human brain processes. Both human minds and computer programs, MacCormick explains, can induce intelligence through emergence: the capability for new phenomena to emerge from the interactions of many small, simple components. Does this mean that a computer program can think like a human In many ways, MacCormick argues, the answer is yes. In Thinking AI, he reveals a new landscape of emergent intelligence-a world in which computer programs can emulate many or all aspects of human thinking but humanity retains its meaning and purpose.
John MacCormick is professor of computer science at Dickinson College. He is the author of Nine Algorithms That Changed the Future: The Ingenious Ideas That Drive Today's Computers and What Can Be Computed A Practical Guide to the Theory of Computation (both Princeton).