From Black Holes and Big Bangs to the Higgs boson and the infinitesimal building blocks of all matter, modern science has been spectacularly successful, with one glaring exception — intelligence. Intelligence still remains as one of the greatest mysteries in science.How do you chat so effortlessly? How do you remember, and why do you forget? From a basis of ten maxims What Makes You Clever explains the difficulties as well as the persuasive and persistent over-estimations of progress in Artificial Intelligence. Computers have transformed our lives, and will continue to do so for many years to come. But ever since the Turing Test proposed in 1950 up to IBM's Deep Blue computer that won the second six-game match against world champion Garry Kasparov, the science of artificial intelligence has struggled to make progress.The reader's expertise is engaged to probe human language, machine learning, neural computing, holistic systems and emergent phenomenon. What Makes You Clever reveals the difficulties that scientists grapple with in their efforts to understand your cleverness, and points to possible ways forward.Contents:A Singular EnigmaScanning for GoldBrain Wave SolutionsWhole Parts of MindsMeaningful Principles — The Search ContinuesHolism — an Unholy ProblemHoping for a Knee up SoonSelf-organising Systems — The Engineer's NightmareThe Knowledge WebLearning Machines — Climbing Lost and BlindHot Technologies — the Doomed and the DubiousMind RecursionUltra-IntelligenceSemantic MiragesHopeware ScienceThe Glass Half Full Readership: General public.