• Army of None

  • Autonomous Weapons and the Future of War
  • By: Paul Scharre
  • Narrated by: Roger Wayne
  • Length: 13 hrs and 21 mins
  • 4.3 out of 5 stars (518 ratings)

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Army of None  By  cover art

Army of None

By: Paul Scharre
Narrated by: Roger Wayne
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Publisher's summary

Paul Scharre, a Pentagon defense expert and former U.S. Army Ranger, explores what it would mean to give machines authority over the ultimate decision of life or death. Scharre's far-ranging investigation examines the emergence of autonomous weapons, the movement to ban them, and the legal and ethical issues surrounding their use. He spotlights artificial intelligence in military technology, spanning decades of innovation from German noise-seeking Wren torpedoes in World War II - antecedents of today's homing missiles - to autonomous cyber weapons, submarine-hunting robot ships, and robot tank armies.

Through interviews with defense experts, ethicists, psychologists, and activists, Scharre surveys what challenges might face "centaur warfighters" on future battlefields, which will combine human and machine cognition. We've made tremendous technological progress in the past few decades, but we have also glimpsed the terrifying mishaps that can result from complex automated systems - such as when advanced F-22 fighter jets experienced a computer meltdown the first time they flew over the International Date Line.

©2018 Paul Scharre (P)2018 Tantor

What listeners say about Army of None

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Informative on a Narrow Subject

The book presented the current thoughts from a variety of professions on the future of autonomous military machines, and autonomous machines in general.

I found the passing philosophy clueless, further reaffirming my observation that humans are still universally clueless, but that is besides the point (though it was the reason I picked up the book, to further test that observation).

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3 people found this helpful

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Robots, weapons, and AI oh my!

This book was an excellent place to start for someone just getting into the whole autonomous weapon and AI discussion. The book is well researched and organized. It draws upon historical examples as well as current policies and issues. The bottom line is that this discussion is critical and Paul Scharre has made a significant contribution to the conversation. I have a much better idea of the murky way ahead, a little less dread of "skynet", and a little more hope for the better angels of humanity. But there will be those who use autonomous weapons, however defined, for nefarious purposes and this book offers some excellent options to counter that. Paul Scharre writes well and offers all sides of the discussion. His work should be read by any and all looking to better understand autonomy in war.

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9 people found this helpful

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Both sides of the story

I thought this book gave a very even and detailed view of the pros and cons of robotics and autonomous features in future products.

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Excellent content, passable perfomance.

The content is excellent and makes this book a worthy successor to Wired for War. Otherwise good narration is undermined by stilted affectation of women's voices. The narrator would be better served to read quotes from women in his own voice and not attempt to affect a higher octave.

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7 people found this helpful

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Thought provoking read

Interesting and thought provoking audiobook. Honestly, I was more interested in the actual technologies involved and that was maybe the first third of the book. The ethical, moral, and practical aspects of autonomous weapons was interesting but not my original focus. I suspect that bans are unworkable and too easily avoidable to be put into practice. The ideas of rules of the road to help keep strategic situations stable seems more workable. All in all, worth the read if you are interested in the development of autonomous weaponry, for or against.

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Thought a bit may have been reading it..

Decent book, but narration rife with mispronunciations.. should have hired an actual veteran or security expert!

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The book is better than the performance

The book is a thoughtful and thorough discussion of both the technology and the implications of autonomous systems. It’s worth a listen, despite the performer. He not only doesn’t understand the concept of acronyms (it’s “SAC,” pronounced “sack,” not “S-A-C”), but occasionally has weird pronunciations for non-acronyms (it’s “USS Vincennes,” not “Voncennes”).

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Hey, I quoted in the book.

Cool, I am the former Army officer quoted as “One CRAM operator described....” in the centaur chapter. As someone who as also thought a lot about these issues and had experience with an autonomous weapon system I thought the book hit all the main points. It was also extremely well written.

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This is the one

I have read several books on the future of war but this is the best. The author picks the main future war topic (autonomous weapons) and thoroughly explora and explains the arguments on both sides. Excellent.

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    4 out of 5 stars

Great book on military

Most of the book elaborate current technology instead of author's expectation of future autonomous weapon. It focused, heavily, on the moral aspect of its usage.

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