Software and Mind: The Mechanistic Myth and Its Consequences

· Andsor Books
4.6
17 reviews
Ebook
930
Pages
Eligible
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About this ebook

Addressing general readers as well as software practitioners, "Software and Mind" discusses the fallacies of the mechanistic ideology and the degradation of minds caused by these fallacies. Mechanism holds that every aspect of the world can be represented as a simple hierarchical structure of entities. But, while useful in fields like mathematics and manufacturing, this idea is generally worthless, because most aspects of the world are too complex to be reduced to simple structures. Our software-related affairs, in particular, cannot be represented in this fashion. And yet, all programming theories and development systems, and all software applications, attempt to reduce real-world problems to neat hierarchical structures of data, operations, and features. Using Karl Popper's famous principles of demarcation between science and pseudoscience, the book shows that the mechanistic ideology has turned most of our software-related activities into pseudoscientific pursuits. Using mechanism as warrant, the software elites are promoting invalid, even fraudulent, software notions. They force us to depend on generic, inferior systems, instead of allowing us to develop software skills and to create our own systems. Software mechanism emulates the methods of manufacturing, and thereby restricts us to high levels of abstraction and simple, isolated structures. The benefits of software, however, can be attained only if we start with low-level elements and learn to create complex, interacting structures. Software, the book argues, is a non-mechanistic phenomenon. So it is akin to language, not to manufactured objects. Like language, it permits us to mirror the world in our minds and to communicate with it. Moreover, we increasingly depend on software in everything we do, in the same way that we depend on language. Thus, being restricted to mechanistic software is like thinking and communicating while being restricted to some ready-made sentences supplied by an elite. Ultimately, by impoverishing software, our elites are achieving what the totalitarian elite described by George Orwell in "Nineteen Eighty-Four" achieves by impoverishing language: they are degrading our minds.

Ratings and reviews

4.6
17 reviews
Abhishek Rawat
November 25, 2018
Good it will be help me... For makes the logic
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digvijay singh
April 19, 2020
good
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A Google user
January 29, 2018
Love it
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About the author

Andrei Sorin lives in Toronto, Canada, where he is working as an independent consultant in software development, support, and research. He holds a B.Sc. in Electrical Engineering (1970), an M.Sc. in Computer Science (1971), and a Ph.D. in Computer Science (1975). He has developed many types of software, from programming tools to business systems. His research interests include application development and maintenance concepts and the philosophy of software.

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