..
text=#000000 vLink=#800080 aLink=#0000ff link=#ff0000 bgColor=#fff0f0>
..
Original Source
Douglas C. Engelbart. Augmenting Human Intellect: A Conceptual
Framework. Summary Report AFOSR-3223 under Contract AF 49(638)-1024, SRI
Project 3578 for Air Force Office of Scientific Research, Stanford Research
Institute, Menlo Park, Ca., October 1962.
..
VI CONCLUSIONS
Three principal conclusions may be drawn concerning the significance and
implications of the ideas that have been presented.
First any possibility for improving the effective utilization of the
intellectual power of society's problem solvers warrants the most serious
consideration. This is because man's problem-solving capability represents
possibly the most important resource possessed by a society. The other
contenders for first importance are all critically dependent for their
development and use upon this resource. Any possibility for evolving an art or
science that can couple directly and significantly to the continued development
of that resource should warrant doubly serious consideration.
..
Second, the ideas presented are to be considered in both of the above senses:
the direct-development sense and the 'art of development' sense. To be sure, the
possibilities have long-term implications, but their pursuit and initial rewards
await us now. By our view, we do not have to wait until we learn how the
human mental processes work, we do not have to wait until we learn how to
make computers more intelligent or bigger or faster, we can begin
developing powerful and economically feasible augmentation systems on the basis
of what we now know and have. Pursuit of further basic knowledge and improved
machines will continue into the unlimited future, and will want to be integrated
into the "art" and its improved augmentation systems--but getting started now
will provide not only orientation and stimulation for these pursuits, but will
give us improved problem-solving effectiveness with which to carry out the
pursuits.
..
Third, it becomes increasingly clear that there should be action now--the
sooner the better--action in a number of research communities and on an
aggressive scale. We offer a conceptual framework and a plan for action, and we
recommend that these be considered carefully as a basis for action If they be
considered but found unacceptable, then at least serious and continued effort
should be made toward developing a more acceptable conceptual framework within
which to view the over-all approach, toward developing a more acceptable plan of
action, or both.
..
This is an open plea to researchers and to those who ultimately motivate,
finance, or direct them, to turn serious attention toward the possibility of
evolving a dynamic discipline that can-treat the problem of improving
intellectual effectiveness in a total sense. This discipline should aim at
producing a continuous cycle of improvements--increased understanding of the
problem, improved means for developing new aug mentation systems, and improved
augmentation systems that can serve the world's problem solvers in general and
this discipline's workers in particular. After all, we spend great sums for
disciplines aimed at understanding and harnessing nuclear power. Why not
consider developing a discipline aimed at understanding and harnessing "neural
power?" In the long run, the power of the human intellect is really much the
more important of the two.
..
Michael Friedewald, September 1997