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El. knyga: Wittgenstein and Artificial Intelligence, Volume II: Values and Governance

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Wittgenstein and AI (Volume I): Mind and Language. This is the first of two edited collections, exploring Wittgensteinian themes in AI. The issues covered by the various chapters of this volume range over a number of topics, with a specific focus on mind and language.

Wittgenstein and AI (Volume II): Value and Governance. This is the second of two edited collections, exploring Wittgensteinian themes in AI. The issues covered by the various chapters of this volume range over a number of topics, with a specific focus on ethics, governance, aesthetics and the law.



The two volumes on Wittgenstein and AI aim to trace and suggest Wittgensteinian influences in some of the most cutting-edge areas of research in Artificial Intelligence (such as Computation, Machine Learning, Natural Language Processing and the use of automation in legal settings). The collection is driven by an essentially interdisciplinary approach, featuring articles from philosophers, computer scientists and legal scholars, writing on a broad range of topics in AI.

The chapters across these two volumes are grouped into two sets of themes: Mind and Language and Value and Governance. These themes correspond to two major areas of research in the philosophical study of AI: the computational mind and the ethics of artificial intelligence. These volumes make a significant and unprecedented contribution to the question of what Wittgenstein’s philosophy can offer to the ever-growing field of AI. It aims to provide insight for both philosophers and non-philosophers alike, offering reflection on the significance of Wittgenstein’s work for AI, and on the implications of advancements in AI technology for Wittgenstein’s philosophy and philosophy influenced by Wittgenstein.

VOLUME I: Wittgenstein and AI (Volume I): Mind and Language. This volume includes chapters on Wittgenstein and Turing’s views on AI, the question of whether machines can think, intentionality, AI language models, analogical reasoning and logic.

VOLUME II: Wittgenstein and AI (Volume II): Value and Governance. This volume includes chapters on ethical AI, rules in AI, rules and the law, human-AI interaction, the moral implications of robotics and the status of AI art.

Volume I

This collection brings together work on the relevance of Wittgenstein’s philosophy to the field of Artificial Intelligence (AI). Over two volumes, our contributors cover a wide range of topics from different disciplinary approaches. In this Volume (I), contributions are centred on two major themes in the philosophy of AI: questions of mind and language. Contributions include chapters on AI thought, intentionality, logic and language, as well as the relationship between Wittgenstein’s thought and Turing’s.

Volume II

This collection brings together work on the relevance of Wittgenstein’s philosophy to the field of Artificial Intelligence (AI). Over two volumes, our contributors cover a wide range of topics from different disciplinary approaches. In this Volume (II), contributions are centred on two major themes in the philosophy of AI: questions of value and governance. Contributions include chapters on both ethics and aesthetics and AI, as well as questions of the governance of AI systems, including legal and policy issues.

Recenzijos

This book offers fresh perspectives on AI through Wittgensteinian lenses: meaning as use, secondary meaning, creativity in rule-following, universals as family resemblances, analogical thinking, truthfulness, cognition embodied, language-games anchored in shared ways of living and acting and thus potentially always more than what can be captured by LLMs. Alois Pichler, Professor at the Department of Philosophy of the University of Bergen, and Head of the Wittgenstein Archives at the University of Bergen (WAB) Questions of mind and language are central to both AI and the philosophy of Wittgenstein. These volumes richly elaborate the key connections, as well as their ethical implications and in so doing prove the ongoing relevance of philosophy to the cutting edge of developments affecting our world. Professor Anthony Grayling, Principal and Founder, Northeastern University London Thanks to an impressive number of expert contributions covering a wide spectrum of enquiry across scientific disciplines, this collection stands as a compelling testament to the enduring relevance of Wittgensteins ideas in contemporary discussions surrounding artificial intelligence, its foundations, risks and transformative potential. Barbara McGillivray, Turing Research Fellow at the Alan Turing Institute, Senior Research Associate at the University of Cambridge and Editor in Chief of the Journal of Open Humanities Data

Daugiau informacijos

A significant and timely contribution to the question of what Wittgensteins philosophy can offer to the ever-growing field of AI
Introduction; Brian Ball, Alice C. Helliwell and Alessandro Rossi;
Chapter
1. Is, Ought and Wittgenstein ; Alessandro Rossi;
Chapter
2. When
Saying Sorry Is the Hardest Game to Play: Wittgenstein, AI and the Quest for
Transparency; Burkhard Schafer;
Chapter
3. Wittgensteinian Considerations of
the Moral Status of Robots; Paula Sweeney;
Chapter
4. Can Machines Act
Ethically?; Luca Alberto Rappuoli;
Chapter
5. Investigating Deepfakes: The
Rise of New Authorities and the Question of Deepfake Regulation; Mehmet
Taylan Cüyaz;
Chapter
6. AI and the Cluster Account of Art; Alice C.
Helliwell;
Chapter
7. An Anthropology of the User in the Age of AI; Richard
Harper;
Chapter
8. Legal and Computer Rules: An Overview Inspired by
Wittgensteins Remarks; Gianmarco Gori;
Chapter 9 Practice Makes Human: Why
We Cant Understand Black-Box Artificial Intelligence; Jean-Charles Pelland,
Jasmin Trächtler and Helene Love; Notes on Contributors; Index
Brian Ball is Associate Professor in Philosophy at Northeastern University London. His research spans a range of areas, notably the philosophy of mind, language and artificial intelligence, and he has taught the early history of analytic philosophy, including Wittgenstein.





Alice Helliwell is Assistant Professor in Philosophy at Northeastern University London. Her research is focused on computational creativity and AI art, including questions of aesthetics and ethics.





Alessandro Rossi is Assistant Professor in Philosophy at Northeastern University London. His work focuses on logic, metaphysics and the areas in which they intersect.