Event

Mar 16, 2023
Taming the Artificial, Ordering the Social: Knowledge, Values, and Politics in the Making of Artificial Intelligence Governance Policy in China, Germany, and the US

Artificial Intelligence, an interdisciplinary field of research and a broad suite of technologies aiming to imitate human intelligence, is set out to bring sweeping changes to human societies. Through the mirror of AI, knowledge and value claims about what humans and societies are, and how humans and societies should evolve are being generated by a variety of stakeholders. While history has shown that techno-scientific development trajectories are not deterministic but subject to the shaping of social factors and shape socio-political orders in the world, AI provides a vantage point to study these mutual shaping processes. By analyzing AI governance policy documents from three nations with major AI ambitions through the conceptual lenses of “socio-technical imaginaries” and “co-production,” the paper presented at this research colloquium maps the distinct and yet intersecting paths planned by policymakers in the making of epistemic, moral and political orders with AI.

Address
Boltzmannstraße 18, 14195 Berlin, Germany
Room
B18-008/Online
Contact and Registration

For further information about the LMRG Colloquium series, specific sessions, or registration (a limited number of places are available), please contact Dieu Linh Bui Dao.

About This Series

The LMRG Colloquium is a venue for members and guests of the Lise Meitner Research Group, "China in the Global System of Science," to share work in progress on an ongoing basis. It is an opportunity to raise questions, discuss methodological challenges, or get feedback on preliminary conclusions. We aim to create a supportive atmosphere that combines rigorous criticism with genuine curiosity.

2023-03-16T14:00:00SAVE IN I-CAL 2023-03-16 14:00:00 2023-03-16 15:30:00 Taming the Artificial, Ordering the Social: Knowledge, Values, and Politics in the Making of Artificial Intelligence Governance Policy in China, Germany, and the US Artificial Intelligence, an interdisciplinary field of research and a broad suite of technologies aiming to imitate human intelligence, is set out to bring sweeping changes to human societies. Through the mirror of AI, knowledge and value claims about what humans and societies are, and how humans and societies should evolve are being generated by a variety of stakeholders. While history has shown that techno-scientific development trajectories are not deterministic but subject to the shaping of social factors and shape socio-political orders in the world, AI provides a vantage point to study these mutual shaping processes. By analyzing AI governance policy documents from three nations with major AI ambitions through the conceptual lenses of “socio-technical imaginaries” and “co-production,” the paper presented at this research colloquium maps the distinct and yet intersecting paths planned by policymakers in the making of epistemic, moral and political orders with AI. Boltzmannstraße 18, 14195 Berlin, Germany B18-008/Online Anna Lisa AhlersDieu Linh Bui Dao Anna Lisa AhlersDieu Linh Bui Dao Europe/Berlin public