The Shortest History of AI

The Six Essential Ideas That Animate It (The Shortest History Series)

A timely addition to the Shortest History series―everything you need to know about AI in six essential ideas

Since Alan Turing first posed the question “Can machines think?” artificial intelligence has evolved from a speculative idea to a transformative force. The Shortest History of AI traces this evolution, from Ada Lovelace’s visionary work to IBM’s groundbreaking defeat of the chess world champion and the revolutionary emergence of ChatGPT. It also explores AI’s cultural journey, touching on classics such as Frankenstein, A Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, and 2001: A Space Odyssey.

Revealing how many “overnight” successes were decades in the making, this accessible and illuminating book helps us to understand how AI functions by explaining the six key ideas that animate it:

  • It searches for answers using predetermined symbols and means-end analysis.
  • It bases its answers on what sort of response it thinks it will get.
  • It follows a set of rules in order to simulate human expertise.
  • It copies the human brain by learning from experience.
  • It uses reinforcement learning, rewarding its own successes and punishing itself for its failures.
  • It uses Bayes’ theorem to calculate the probability of a cause based on its effect.
Fast-paced and rich with facts, The Shortest History of AI equips readers to understand where we’ve been―and where we’re headed.

B&W photos and illustrations throughout

The Experiment (November 4, 2025)
Author photo
Toby Walsh
Toby Walsh
Book cover picture
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