I cannot imagine a better introduction to the mainstream philosophical debate about artificial intelligence than that provided
by Hubert Dreyfus in this volume. 1Dreyfus, H., 2008, ‘Why Heidegerrian AI failed and why fixing it would make it more Heideggerian.’ pp. 000–000 in After Cognitivism, (ed.), Karl Leidlmair, Dordrecht: Springer. Dreyfus, as he explains, is now to be included within the mainstream, a position
he has achieved after a notoriously unjustified delay of many decades, and by a process which is, to some extent, described
in the paper itself (AI students attending his MIT seminar and so forth). Dreyfus by pulling things together so clearly, has
actually made it easier to see what is still wrong even now that he and Heidegger have been grasped to the bosom of AI. What
is missing is not, however, what Dreyfus says it is – more of his type of Heidegger. What is missing is any understanding
of the distinction between humans and animals.