Call: Al: Limitations, Foundations, and New Directions – 24th CUNY Graduate Student Philosophy Conference

Call for Abstracts

24th Annual CUNY Graduate Student Philosophy Conference
Artificial Intelligence: Limitations, Foundations, and New Directions
Saturday, April 24, 2021
Online
https://philevents.org/event/show/88190

Submission deadline: March 19, 2021

We welcome abstracts from graduate students on any topic related to artificial intelligence, broadly construed. The conference will be held virtually on Saturday, April 24.

Keynote Speakers: Jesse Prinz (CUNY), TBA

Contemporary research in machine learning and artificial intelligence (AI) is proving dramatically successful where earlier projects stalled. Image models and language models today display sophisticated (and sometimes uncanny) abilities in some narrow domains. Various flavors of machine learning see applications in many industries, and seem poised to seriously alter creative human work, policing and surveillance, medicine, entertainment, war, prediction and forecasting, etc. There is an opening for philosophers to write about the character and use of such systems now, as they grow out of their infancy and see increasingly widespread integration in society – and before their norms and uses become established, locked in, and hard to change.

Possible paper topics include, but are not limited to:

  • AI ethics and safety
  • Autonomous weapons and philosophy
  • Deepfakes and philosophy
  • Race, gender and current applications of AI (e.g. facial recognition)
  • AI in policing and the justice systems
  • Whether Strong AI is possible
  • Predictive algorithms and philosophy
  • The relationship between AI and human/animal cognition
  • Interpretable and explainable AI
  • The Transformer architecture and deep learning and philosophy
  • The role of AI in culture and society
  • The nature of computation
  • The limitations of AI
  • Consciousness and AI
  • Creativity and AI
  • The frame problem
  • AI and agency

Please submit abstracts to cunyphilosophyconference24@gmail.com. Include your name and institutional affiliation in the email body. Abstracts should be attached in PDF format and should be prepared for blind review. Abstracts should be less than 300 words. Papers must be suitable for a 30-minute presentation.

Abstracts must be submitted by March 19.

Successful applicants will be contacted by April 1.

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