Fall Institute: 'Limits of Intelligence: Meaning and Value'
Modern knowledge-societies value intelligence as a set of problem-solving capacities. In recent years, we could be said to have entered not only a so-called “AI summer”, but even a “technology summer”. This imaginary draws on accelerated progress in AI research and the large-scale socio-economic and political implementation of ‘intelligence’ technology. In our fall workshop we will question some of the key assumptions underlying this socio-political constellation. In particular, we will focus on existential and linguistic meaning as potential limits to intelligent processing. Our goal is to trace the contours of a novel type of ethics of intelligence that takes into account the fuzzy, historically changing, and apparently non-computable nature of values. This requires us to recalibrate our sense of what it is to understand meaning and value in an age in which intelligence and even understanding seem to emerge in the realm of our techno-scientific artifacts.
Registration period
Thursday, 29.02.24
Time
Monday, 30.09.24
– Friday, 04.10.24
Topic
KI
Speaker
Shannon Vallor (University of Edinburgh), Jocelyn Maclure (McGill University), Sebastian Gardner (University College London), Michael Clune (Case Western Reserve University), Fumi Okiji (University of California, Berkeley), Markus Gabriel, Paul Kottman, Zed Adams
Target groups
Researchers
Location
New School for Social Research (NYC)
Reservation
not required
Organizer
TRA 4 - Individuen, Institutionen und Gesellschaften; Instiute for Philosophy and the New Humanities; Udo Keller Stiftung Forum Humanum
Contact