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Will Robots Feel Pain? The Politics of Race, the Governance of Technology, and the Future of Humanity – Sylvester Johnson

April 23, 2021 @ 2:00 pm - 3:00 pm

The UF Intersections Symposium celebrates the achievements of the UF Intersections project and the first two completing classes of Intersections Scholars (2020 + 2021). This two-hour event begins with a keynote presentation by Prof. Sylvester Johnson (Virginia Tech) entitled “Will Robots Feel Pain? The Politics of Race, the Governance of Technology, and the Future of Humanity” from 2-3pm. This keynote is also part of the Humanities Center’s Data & Democracy 2020-21 speaker series. The second half of the event (from 3-4pm) includes presentations from UF faculty, doctoral students, and undergraduates in the Intersections Scholars program speaking about their activities addressing grand-challenge questions in the humanities

Webinar registration here.

This event is free and open to all UF students, faculty, staff, their families, and the public. Audience members are welcome to attend only the keynote lecture or stay for the entire symposium. For more information on the keynote lecture and symposium program, visit: https://intersections.humanities.ufl.edu/events/intersections-spring-symposium/

From Aristotle’s ancient conception of the soul, to Ibn Rushd’s twelfth-century analytics of the intellect, to the information theory underlying neural networks, scholars have queried the agency of things and the relationship between matter and its other spirit. Does agency inhere in material things? Can an assemblage of machine parts be a person? What distinguishes humans from mere objects? In this talk, Sylvester Johnson proposes that the use of intelligent machines (in the form of artificial intelligence or machine-learning applications) for human enhancement has crystallized these age-old conundrums in a new key. Machines are now being successfully engineered to write poetry, compose music, make moral decisions, and even program other machines. More importantly, military efforts to combine humans with intelligent machines are beginning to produce far-reaching consequences that move beyond scenarios that pit mere humans against mere machines. By considering the racial history of so-called fetishism, Johnson gives historical depth to contemporary developments in cybernetics and discusses the prospect of new frameworks for humans and non-humans that may create new possibilities of machine life.

Sylvester A. Johnson is Assistant Vice Provost for the Humanities and Executive Director of the “Tech for Humanity” initiative at Virginia Tech. He is the founding director of Virginia Tech’s new Center for Humanities, which is supporting human-centered research and humanistic approaches to guide technology. Sylvester’s research has examined religion, race, and empire in the Atlantic world; religion and sexuality; national security practices; and the impact of intelligent machines and human enhancement on human identity and race governance. Johnson led an Artificial Intelligence project that developed a successful proof-of-concept machine learning application to ingest and analyze a humanities text. He is currently writing a book on human identity in an age of intelligent machines and human-machine symbiosis.

All events are free and open to the public.

 UF Series Funders and Co-Sponsors:

Center for the Humanities and the Public Sphere (Rothman Endowment); College of Liberal Arts and Sciences; Chief Diversity Officer; Informatics Institute; Bob Graham Center for Public Service; Center for Latin American Studies; African American Studies Program; Center for Gender, Sexualities, and Women’s Studies Research

For information on past speaker series, click here.

Details

Date:
April 23, 2021
Time:
2:00 pm - 3:00 pm

Venue

Reitz Union G330