Making Common Sense: On the Construction of the Obvious from Antiquity to AI - Michael North - Books - Stanford University Press - 9781503646186 - May 19, 2026
In case cover and title do not match, the title is correct

Making Common Sense: On the Construction of the Obvious from Antiquity to AI


Get an email once the item is available
Do you have a profile? Log in
Add to your iMusic wish list

Also available as:

Common sense is supposed to be so obvious it can go without saying. And yet, it has been hard to pin down, partly because its contents are vague and inconsistent, and partly because it has always been difficult to say what kind of sense common sense is. Making Common Sense is an historical account of attempts, from antiquity to the present, to solve this puzzle.

The ambiguity began centuries ago with the merger of the common sense, the sensorium commune, a kind of sixth sense responsible for coordinating the other five, with the sensus communis, a collection of implicit social habits and beliefs. Ever since, common sense, as a power both practical and thoughtful, has promised to split the difference between sensation and reason, the body and the mind, and between individuals and their society. As challenges from medical science and skeptical philosophy accumulated, though, common sense assumed a number of different forms in response.

It has been a physical organ, a mental faculty, a body of knowledge, a system of axioms, an ethical principle, and a synonym for culture, until finally, with game theory and artificial intelligence, it becomes a number. Michael North tracks the obvious through these changes, showing why it remains, even now in the age of AI, as dark and mysterious as it was in the beginning.

Media Books     Hardcover Book   (Book with hard spine and cover)
Released May 19, 2026
ISBN13 9781503646186
Publishers Stanford University Press
Pages 260
Dimensions 150 × 220 × 20 mm   ·   508 g

More by Michael North

Show all

Mere med samme udgiver