Starting with this one:

> http://goertzel.org/AGI_History_early_draft.pdf

> These practical and conceptual achievements paved the way for the pioneering 
> work of Charles Babbage
and Ada Lovelace in the 1800s, as they designed and sought to build a
fully programmable arithmetic
calculator. Had they succeeded, it would have been the first artificial
computer truly worthy of the name.
Unfortunately they never quite got their ”Analytical Engine” working,
due to practical difficulties related to
irregularly shaped parts and so forth. In hindsight the workability of
their ideas seems almost obvious, but
at the time their pursuit was judged insane by most contemporaries

This is perhaps a little misleading - while Babbage's ideas were
controversial, they were taken seriously enough for him to receive
substantial funding from the British government. (It has been reckoned
that the improvements in precision manufacturing developed in the
process of trying to get the analytical engine to work, more than
repaid the investment.)

> – its a perspective that was created

should be "it's"

> . Chomsky’s classic work Syntactic Structures appeared in 1957, presenting an 
> incisive
analysis of natural language syntax in terms of mathematical formal
grammars – in essence building a bridge
between natural human languages and programming languages, and laying
the conceptual foundations for
computational linguistics as well as modern theoretical linguistics.

May be worth clarifying that Chomsky's work was intended to capture
natural language, ended up only partly doing this, not enough for even
narrow AI purposes, but turned out unexpectedly to be highly useful
for programming languages?

The discussion of symbolic versus connectionist and genetic
programming approaches should perhaps mention the terms 'neat' and
'scruffy'?

> based on
analogy to the humanmind

should be "human mind"

> The CM5 massively parallel AI computer

While AI was the personal motivation for Hillis, there was nothing in
the CM hardware designs that particularly suited them for AI work -
indeed I would argue that on the contrary, such oddball and
restrictive designs are particularly _un_suited for AI work - maybe
just call it a massively parallel computer?

Overall, I like it. There's a tradeoff between comprehensiveness and
brevity, and also between presenting disjointed facts with no pattern
versus going overboard in imposing the author's own views. I think
you've done an unusually good job here in balancing both of those.


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