Weiter zum Inhalt Weiter zur Fußzeile

Book presentation "The Smartness Mandate"

Aktivität: Vortrag oder Präsentation an externen Einrichtungen/VeranstaltungenVortragBeigetragen

Personen und Einrichtungen

Datum

16 März 2023

Beschreibung

Over the last half century, "smartness"—the drive for ubiquitous computing—has become a mandate: a new mode of managing and governing politics, economics, and the environment.

Smart phones. Smart cars. Smart homes. Smart cities. The imperative to make our world ever smarter in the face of increasingly complex challenges raises several questions: What is this "smartness mandate"? How has it emerged, and what does it say about our evolving way of understanding—and managing—reality? How have we come to see the planet and its denizens first and foremost as data-collecting instruments?

In The Smartness Mandate, Orit Halpern and Robert Mitchell radically suggest that "smartness" is not primarily a technology, but rather an epistemology. Through this lens, they offer a critical exploration of the practices, technologies, and subjects that such an understanding relies upon—above all, artificial intelligence and machine learning. The authors approach these not simply as techniques for solving problems of calculations, but rather as modes of managing life (human and other) in terms of neo-Darwinian evolution, distributed intelligences, and "resilience," all of which have serious implications for society, politics, and the environment.

The smartness mandate constitutes a new form of planetary governance, and Halpern and Mitchell aim to map the logic of this seemingly inexorable and now naturalized demand to compute, illuminate the genealogy of how we arrived here, and point to alternative imaginaries of the possibilities and potentials of smart technologies and infrastructures.

(Fach-)Tagung

TitelTUDiSC 3. Verbundtagung
UntertitelDisruptive Worldmaking: Technology, Design, Art
Veranstaltungsnummer3
Dauer16 März 2023
Webseite
BekanntheitsgradInternationale Veranstaltung
OrtOpen Science Lab
StadtDresden
LandDeutschland

Schlagworte

Forschungsprofilli­nien der TU Dresden