I can't recommend this book yet because I only started it recently, but I see many parallels with Ray's thinking. He even starts off the book with a discussion about analog vs. digital effects in the film industry, and the section I'm on right now is criticising AI for trying to replicate the human brain as if the brain was like a computer: "...the study of actual brains, which turn out [to] be much more like sensory processors than logic machines".
He also has a new book called "Gaming AI: Why AI can't think but can transform jobs". Which I haven't read, but I imagine continues in a similar vein critiquing the notion of AI as anything like human analog intelligence.
He also has a new book called "Gaming AI: Why AI can't think but can transform jobs". Which I haven't read, but I imagine continues in a similar vein critiquing the notion of AI as anything like human analog intelligence.