Fahlman (et. al.) CMU Common Lisp is still used.  It is central to the core 
software stack of at least two quantum computing companies.

From: Friam <friam-boun...@redfish.com> On Behalf Of Frank Wimberly
Sent: Saturday, June 11, 2022 5:56 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <friam@redfish.com>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Kissing Kissinger

In 1978 as I was about to leave Pittsburgh for a job at Bell Labs my wife and I 
were staying with with Scott and Penny Fahlman since our furniture was on a 
moving van.  Scott was an AI hotshot who had recently arrived at Carnegie 
Mellon.  I was typing the final revision of my numerical analysis dissertation 
on my Smith Corona when Scott said, "Frank, that will be the last computer 
science dissertation ever written on a typewriter."

---
Frank C. Wimberly
140 Calle Ojo Feliz,
Santa Fe, NM 87505

505 670-9918
Santa Fe, NM

On Sat, Jun 11, 2022, 5:20 AM Steve Smith 
<sasm...@swcp.com<mailto:sasm...@swcp.com>> wrote:

Holy Moley!

The references to Kissenger et. al.'s "The Age of AI: and our Human Future" 
here lead me to find his  1950 Senior Thesis at Harvard (scanned copy of the 
typewritten 
original<https://ia903000.us.archive.org/23/items/HenryAKissingerTheMeaningOfHistoryReflectionsOnSpenglerToynbeeAndKant/Henry%20A%20Kissinger%20-%20The%20Meaning%20of%20History_%20Reflections%20on%20Spengler%2C%20Toynbee%2C%20and%20Kant.pdf>).

https://ia903000.us.archive.org/23/items/HenryAKissingerTheMeaningOfHistoryReflectionsOnSpenglerToynbeeAndKant/Henry%20A%20Kissinger%20-%20The%20Meaning%20of%20History_%20Reflections%20on%20Spengler%2C%20Toynbee%2C%20and%20Kant.pdf

I am only 20 something pages into this 400 page tome and definitely over my 
head in several ways.   His language reads a little *overly* flowery and 
technically specific, and yet that may just be a result of the *era* and it's 
topic as an analysis of three writer's take on history itself (Spengler, 
Toynbee, Kant).   I have tried resolving several obscure terms such as "genus 
Culture", references to which I can only find in archaic botanical texts?   I 
have not read Spengler and only skimmed Toynbee and the Kant I read is now 40 
years past, so of course I don't have much more than an effing clue of what he 
is effing on about here, yet it is fascinating nevertheless.

Even reading the typewritten type carries a sort of spectre of the time and 
place this was generated.   It adds significance that I gifted my last working 
typewriter (at times I have had as many as 5 or 6 which could be made to work 
with a little care in use) to one of our house-sitters while we travel.   She 
may well be typing on it as I type this.  The unevenness of a manual 
typewriter, the waviness of the line and the uneveness of the impression 
reflects in some way the mechanical device but also the operator.   My instinct 
is that Kissinger did not type this final manuscript himself if in fact he even 
typed any of it.   It has the evenness (relative, given the limits of the type 
of device) of an accomplished typist, typing in a workman-like way.  The 
digital copy (pdf) appears to be a scan of a photocopy to boot, adding contrast 
enhancement and some subsequent elision of bits by thresholding.

I was tempted to cut-n-paste a few choice lines (images, not txt) and comment 
on them, but realize that perhaps nobody else here cares and it would just be a 
manual exercise for myself to no point otherwise.   OCR is good enough these 
days to make it possible to render it as txt, etc.  but since I am bogged down 
in the text itself and distracted by trying to graze through Jenny's library 
here in Weesp, while quaffing the entireity of one of her favorite tomes (a 
biography of Gregory Bateson), I will leave it now and see if anyone else 
delves deep enough into the source material to spark a conversation here that I 
can join or simply enjoy.

So many books, so little time!  If I had more time I would learn to speedread 
so I can have more time to read more.




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