The Master Algorithm

 The Master Algorithm: How the Quest for the Ultimate Learning Machine Will Remake Our World is a book by Pedro Domingos released in 2015. Domingos wrote the book in order to generate interest from people outside the field.

The Master Algorithm:
How the Quest for the Ultimate Learning Machine Will Remake Our World
'The Master Algorithm' 2016 - book cover.jpg
AuthorPedro Domingos
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SubjectArtificial intelligence
GenrePhilosophypopular science
PublisherBasic Books
Publication date
September 22, 2015
Media typePrint, e-book, audiobook
Pages352 pp.
ISBN978-0465065707

OverviewEdit

The book outlines five tribes of machine learning: inductive reasoningconnectionismevolutionary computationBayes' theorem and analogical modelling. The author explains these tribes to the reader by referring to more understandable processes of logic, connections made in the brainnatural selectionprobability and similarity judgements. Throughout the book, it is suggested that each different tribe has the potential to contribute to a unifying "master algorithm".

Towards the end of the book the author pictures a "master algorithm" in the near future, where machine learning algorithms asymptotically grow to a perfect understanding of how the world and people in it work.[1] Although the algorithm doesn't yet exist, he briefly reviews his own invention of the Markov logic network.[2]

In the mediaEdit

In 2016 Bill Gates recommended the book, alongside Nick Bostrom's Superintelligence, as one of two books everyone should read to understand AI.[3] In 2018 the book was noted to be on Chinese President Xi Jinping's bookshelf.[4]

ReceptionEdit

A computer science educator stated in Times Higher Education that the examples are clear and accessible.[5] In contrast, The Economist agreed Domingos "does a good job" but complained that he "constantly invents metaphors that grate or confuse".[6] Kirkus Reviews praised the book, stating that "Readers unfamiliar with logic and computer theory will have a difficult time, but those who persist will discover fascinating insights."[7]

New Scientist review called it "compelling but rather unquestioning".[8]

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