GET.Inspired: Innovating Higher Education through Interdisciplinary Practice/aura Veart, LaJuné McMillian, Joanna Bryson, Georg Russegger, Stefanie Lindstaedt /Photo: Ars Electronica / Martin Hieslmair

Hurtling Towards Sustainability: Education, Work, and the Arts

Joanna Bryson (GB/DE

POSTCITY, First Floor, Conference Hall
Mi 4. Sep 2024 14:20 – 15:05

What are the limits of what we can do with AI? Will there be a role for humans in the future? For how many humans? Can we all find a place in society?

In the context of this year’s focus on hope, this talk describes a future with near-universal acknowledgement of all residents roles in constituting states and their government, as well as those entities that give us employment. I then look more specifically on what this means for journalism and academia. While basing some arguments in established theory and data, this talk will also include speculation to help frame and further a discussion we must all be having, including later in the same day. As the world hurtles towards and through another period of emergency measures, this time to navigate the climate crisis, we are likely to come out the other side with more knowledge of ourselves than ever before. What will be the upshot?

Language: EN

Bio

  • Joanna Bryson

    GB

    Joanna Bryson is a professor of Ethics and Technology at the Hertie School. Her research focuses on the impact of technology on human cooperation and AI/ICT governance. From 2002-2019 she was on the Computer Science faculty at the University of Bath. She has also been affiliated with the Department of Psychology at Harvard University and the Department of Anthropology at the University of Oxford, the School of Social Sciences at the University of Mannheim, and the Princeton Center for Information Technology Policy.