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Event details

Apr
10

Antikythera: Philosophy of Planetary Computation in the Design Studio (Recent Projects and Provocations)

  • Lecture,
  • Academics & Research,
  • Humanities,
  • Computer Science,
  • Digital Humanities
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As Stanisław Lem once put it, some technologies are instrumental, providing a means through which to change the world, but others are ultimately existential in significance, revealing aspects of reality previously unknowable and thus changing how intelligence knows the world and comprehends itself. Computation, both discovered and invented, is both instrumental and existential.

Antikythera is a think tank, design studio and publishing platform (with MIT Press) that seeks to reorient planetary computation as a philosophical, technological, and geopolitical force, by collaborating with scientists, philosophers, designers on a portfolio of research projects. In this talk, Bratton, will explore the theoretical provocations that underlie the program’s recent work and upcoming initiatives.

The program is structured around several core research themes. Planetary computation refers to the emergence of computation as global infrastructure and “accidental megastructure,” as described in Bratton’s The Stack: On Software and Sovereignty (MIT Press, 2016); computational simulations as “epistemological technologies,” multipolar computational geopolitics and what Bratton terms “hemispherical stacks;” synthetic intelligence and problems of anthropomorphism and AI alignment overfitting; and planetary sapience and how to locate the emergence of machine intelligence in the evolution of complex intelligence more broadly.

Bratton will also present work in progress from new collaborations with Astrophysicist and Assembly Theorist Sara Walker on the philosophical figure of planetary intelligence in contrast with posthumanist neo-dualisms, and with Google Research and Deep Mind on cognitive infrastructures, human-AI interaction design, generative multi-agent simulation, physicalized AI in evolutionary robotics, and structures of “fractal intelligence.”

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Benjamin Bratton’s work spans Philosophy, Computer Science and Geopolitics. He is Professor of Philosophy of Technology and Speculative Design at the University of California, San Diego. Bratton is also Director of Antikythera, a think-tank on the speculative philosophy of computation at the Berggruen Institute.

Speakers

Benjamin Bratton

Event Details

University programs and activities are open to all eligible participants without regard to identity or other protected characteristics. Sponsorship of an event does not constitute institutional endorsement of external speakers or views presented.

View physical accessibility information for campus buildings and find accessible routes using the Princeton Campus Map app.

Date

April 10, 2024

Time

4:30 p.m.

Location

Aaron Burr Hall, 219

Audience

  • Open to the Public,
  • Faculty & Academic Professionals,
  • Staff,
  • Students,
  • Alumni

University Sponsors

This event is co-sponsored by the Center for Digital Humanities, the Anthropology Department, the Comparative Literature Department, and the Interdisciplinary Doctoral Program in the Humanities.

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