Humanities and Fine Arts 191HFA65 - FYS- Imagining Artificial Bein

Fall
2021
01
1.00
Robert Louis

TU 4:00PM 4:50PM

UMass Amherst
23538
Herter Hall room 202
rnlouis@umass.edu
Have you wondered about what "artificial intelligence" really means? The idea is everywhere. It recommends playlists, optimizes shipping networks, and even crashes a few cars. We've been writing about it in fiction for decades, but those texts talk about more than just AI. Exploring the intelligences we "make" is often a way of exploring the intelligences that we "are." In many works of fiction, robots and sentient computers are blank slates that allow us to dream up other ways of being. Writers from Mary Shelley to Philip K. Dick have speculated about what happens when we create thinking beings from square one. By looking at these ideas and comparing them to our own lives (and to the real-life science unfolding in real time around us), we can use fiction as a powerful asset to help us understand the present. This seminar looks at a broad selection of works dealing with artificial intelligences, using perspectives ranging from philosophy to computer science to help us get the most out of each text. In doing so, we'll get a better idea of what stories are "really" talking about when they involve AI, what that can tell us about our "real life" relationship with computers, and, most importantly, why it matters to us.

Open to first-year Humanities and Fine Arts Exploratory Track students and first-year HFA Majors.

Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.