"[T]he book is an interesting attempt at building a multidimensional account of AI as a social phenomenon. The reading could be particularly useful for social science students and researchers who might be triggered to think of how AI redefines basic human notions like intelligence, privacy, sexuality, autonomy, and trust."International Journal of Technoethics
Preface
1 The Origins of Artificial Intelligence
2 Making Sense of AI
3 Global Innovation and National Strategies
4 The Institutional Dimensions of AI
5 Automation and the Fate of Employment
6 Social Inequalities Since AI
7 Algorithmic Surveillance
8 The Futures of AI
Further Reading
Notes
Anthony Elliott is Executive Director of the Jean Monnet Centre of Excellence and Network at the University of South Australia, where he is Research Professor of Sociology.