The Humanities and the Rise of AI - Luxembourg, 14-18 June 2020
---------------

The Humanities and the Rise of AI
Implications of Cultural and Societal Engineering

Organized by the Faculty of Humanities, Education and Social Sciences
in cooperation with the Department of Computer Science (University of 
Luxembourg)

We invite paper presentations of 20 minutes in one of our 4 sections (see 
below):

Submission deadline for abstracts (up to 2 pages)
January 31, 2020 - please send to: 
c...@endsofthehumanities.com<mailto:c...@endsofthehumanities.com>

Travel grants for early career researchers are available. For further 
information, please visit http://endsofthehumanities.com/wp/travel-grants/

Digitization and the rise of artificial intelligence forecast radical change on 
all aspects of human practice, especially given the ever-improving abilities of 
algorithms in tasks like pattern recognition and their practical application. 
Powerful technology arises from AI research, opening the gate for various forms 
of cultural and societal engineering, i.e., a reshaping of culture and society 
by dint of algorithmic models and ‘intelligent’ applications.

Although the development of artificial intelligence is still in its beginnings, 
it has already triggered an enormous rush of utopian and dystopian thinking. 
While some dream of immortality and the vanquishing of poverty, disease, and 
warfare, others foresee a grim future for those parts of humanity that will 
find themselves outpaced by technology. Potential consequences of the changes 
imposed by technological advancement on human practice reach from the level of 
the individual, through cultural techniques, to the organization of society as 
a whole, raising fundamental questions which we will address in the four 
sections of the conference resp. special events.

Special events are planned by the AI-team around the topics "Social robotics" 
and "A technological roadmap for AI after 2050".
We consider a special issue of a high-ranked journal for extended versions of 
high-quality computer-science-oriented contributions.
More information will be provided in the coming months.

Invited speakers include, among others:
--------------------------------------
- Armin Grunwald
(Head of Institute for Technology Assessment and Systems Analysis, KIT, 
Karlsruhe )
- Koen V. Hindriks
(Prof. Artificial intelligence, VU Amsterdam, focusing on Social Robotics, 
Co-Founder "Interactive Robotics")
- Lyse Langlois
(Scientific director of the International Observatory of the Societal Impact of 
AI and Digitization, Université Laval)
- Giuseppe Longo
(Prof. emeritus, Centre Cavaillès, CNRS, Collège de France & Ecole Normale 
Supérieure, Paris)
- Luís Moniz Pereira
(Prof. emeritus of Computer Science at the New university of Lisbon, author of 
several books on Machine Ethics)

Conference sections:
--------------------
• Section I – Mind and Consciousness: How does artificial intelligence impact 
our understanding of the human mind, especially in relation to the role of its 
computational equivalents that reach more and more aspects of everyday life 
(e.g., chatbots, driverless mobility, risk assessment software in the banking 
and insurance sector)?
• Section II – Learning and Inventing What are the consequences of digitization 
and machine learning algorithms for education and our understanding of learning 
and creativity (e.g., in schooling through adaptive tutors, but also against 
the background of our current notion of creativity as a unique human ability)?
• Section III – Reading and Data Modeling How will the increasing use of 
computational methodology change the ways we relate to the past and envision 
the future (e.g., by reading), both in academia and in society? How can the 
enrichment of algorithmic models with methods and results from the humanities 
shape and improve computational assessment of human practice (e.g., data mining 
of big text corpora, automated translation, racial bias in neural networks)?
• Section IV – Complexity and Control: How does the use of artificial 
intelligence in all domains of human practice influence how we deal with 
complexity (e.g., of society) and human control thereof? Can computational 
methods help to reduce, organize, and analyze cultural complexity, or do they 
pose a threat to human control over different aspects of the lifeworld (e.g., 
security and network technology, automation of industrial production, 
autonomous weaponry)?

Against the background of such questions, the conference aims to foster an open 
and critical reflection on the consequences of cultural and societal 
engineering. The conference investigates not only opportunities and 
shortcomings of AI research, but also implications and potential structural 
effects of technological innovation for the organization of societal practice 
(e.g., work) and techniques of cultural self-reflection (e.g., history). It 
will not only ask what technologies can do (or will be able to do in the 
future), but also how these capabilities can be compared and related to their 
human equivalents, e.g., perception, cognition, and communication.

The original general CfP can be found at 
http://endsofthehumanities.com/wp/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/CfP-Humanities-and-the-Rise-of-AI.pdf


CfP is also available on: 
http://www.wikicfp.com/cfp/servlet/event.showcfp?eventid=97474&copyownerid=47767



Dr. Amro Najjar
AI RoboLab
FSTC / CSC

UNIVERSITÉ DU LUXEMBOURG

CAMPUS BELVAL
6, avenue de la Fonte
L-4364 Esch-sur-Alzette
T (+352) 46 66 44 5473
amro.naj...@uni.lu<mailto:amro.naj...@uni.lu> / www.uni.lu<http://www.uni.lu>


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