Sarah Lawrence College

Being Human: 2023-24 Event Series

Long before the emergence of Artificial Intelligence (AI) as we know it, the human imagination has been captivated by the idea of machines that could reason, communicate, and operate independently in the world. Literature, film, and television abound with both utopian and dystopian foretellings of a future in which humans coexist with their autonomous creations. Today, we find ourselves surrounded by voice recognition, self-driving cars, and chatbots that carry on conversations like uncanny disembodied oracles, and the centuries-old question has become more salient than ever: What does it mean to be human?

Text reads "Being Human" with arrows replacing the I and G. Below, "Evolving Humanity in the Age of Artificial Intelligence" in smaller font.

During the 2023–24 academic year, Sarah Lawrence grappled with that question in the Being Human series, engaging the potential and pitfalls of generative AI from a variety of perspectives. A full schedule of lectures, panels, and conversations explored how societies make sense of emergent AI technologies; how current practices shape what we are becoming; what role ethics, politics, and culture should play; and who (or what) should lead us into the future.

A research guide companion to the Being Human series is provided by the Esther Raushenbush Library, and can be accessed online.

In Conversation: Brian Christian, Author of The Alignment Problem and Algorithms to Live By, with President Cristle Collins Judd

April 17, 2024

Brian Christian is an acclaimed author and researcher whose work explores the human implications of computer science. He is best known for his bestselling series of books: The Most Human Human, which uses his experience as a human “confederate” in the Turing test to examine what chatbots reveal about the nature of language and communication; Algorithms to Live By, with Tom Griffiths, which applies computational principles to everyday human decision making; and The Alignment Problem, a nuanced investigation of the ethics and safety challenges confronting the field of AI and a portrait of the community of researchers working to address them.

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Unleashing Creative Potential: Exploring AI's Impact on Human Creativity at the Intersection of Media and Technology with Phil Wiser

November 16, 2023

Phil Wiser has received numerous patents for his pioneering work in internet music and television distribution technology. He broke new ground across the areas of IP-based content delivery, machine recommendation systems, video delivery over the Internet, and cybersecurity. Prior to his current position as Executive Vice President and Chief Technology Officer of Paramount Global, Wiser led the technology and product development transformation at Hearst Corporation, where he managed their technology migration to the cloud and established a data-driven, cloud-first media environment for their digital businesses. He created the digital businesses at Sony Music, including forging the groundbreaking deal to launch iTunes, and redefined the television experience with the first successful television program recommendation technology and the first system to deliver a full cable bundle via Internet delivery at Sezmi Corporation.

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In Conversation: Melanie Mitchell, Author of Artificial Intelligence: A Guide for Thinking Humans, with President Cristle Collins Judd

October 3, 2023

Melanie Mitchell is a professor at the Santa Fe Institute. Her current research focuses on conceptual abstraction and analogy-making in humans and AI systems. Melanie is the author or editor of six books and numerous scholarly papers in the fields of artificial intelligence, cognitive science, and complex systems. Her book Complexity: A Guided Tour (Oxford University Press) won the 2010 Phi Beta Kappa Science Book Award and was named by Amazon.com as one of the 10 best science books of 2009. Her latest book, Artificial Intelligence: A Guide for Thinking Humans (Farrar, Straus, and Giroux), has been shortlisted for the 2023 Cosmos Prize for Scientific Writing.

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Being Human: Panel Discussion with Sarah Lawrence Faculty

September 6, 2023

This faculty panel kicked off the Being Human series with an overview of some of the key issues we will engage with throughout the year and a discussion of the impacts of Artificial Intelligence on a number of fields. Moderator Mustafa Sakarya, director of the Sarah Lawrence Library, was joined by faculty members Sammy Floyd (Psychology & Child Development); Laura Hercher MS ’01 (Director of Research in Human Genetics); Jim Marshall (Computer Science); and Angela Ferraiolo (Mary Griggs Burke Chair in Art & Art History, Visual and Studio Arts).

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The Being Human series' consideration of a theme from a variety of perspectives builds on the work of previous academic year event series: History Matters (2022-23), Belonging (2021-22), Justice (2020-21), E Pluribus Unum (2019-20), Difference in Dialogue (2018-19), and Democracy and Education (2017-18).

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