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DTSTAMP:20260316T023538Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260201T000000
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SUMMARY:Intelligence and Imitation: Mind\, Mechanism\, Mimesis
UID:20260317T115316Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@fe80:0:0:0:8c16:90ff:fea7:70aa%3
TZID:America/New_York
LOCATION:Johns Hopkins University\, Baltimore\, United States\, 21218
DESCRIPTION:<p>Intelligence and Imitation: Mind\, Mechanism\, Mimesis</p>\n<p>Inaugural Humanities of AI Workshop&nbsp\;<br> Johns Hopkins University\, April 24-26\, 2026</p>\n<p>As a&nbsp\;creative aspiration\, the Greek notion of <em>mimesis</em> (&ldquo\;imitation&rdquo\;) manifested not only in artistic works imitating reality and philosophical speculations but also in scientific theories and mechanical artifacts. Plato and Aristotle&rsquo\;s <em>nous</em> as a non-bodily principle of intelligibility underwriting cosmic order and thought\; Hobbes and LaMettrie&rsquo\;s machinelike mind and world\; the Jaquet-Droz family&rsquo\;s musical automata\; Wolfgang von Kempelen&rsquo\;s&nbsp\;chess-playing Turk\; Norbert Wiener&rsquo\;s cybernetic&nbsp\;analogy between human\, animal\, and machine\; Japanese roboticist Masahiro Mori&rsquo\;s&nbsp\; observation of the revulsion to imperfect verisimilitude<em>&nbsp\;</em>(<em>Bukimi&nbsp\;no Tani</em>: &ldquo\;uncanny valley&rdquo\;)\; and Soviet semiotician Yuri Lotman&rsquo\;s culture as collective mind\, exemplify the broad relevance of &ldquo\;imitations&rdquo\; to science\, literature\, and culture.</p>\n<p>Developments in artificial intelligence (AI) participate in the legacy of <em>mimesis</em> but also complicate and challenge it.&nbsp\;<a name="_Hlk214610301"></a> In the course of AI&rsquo\;s research history\, AIs have variously been claimed to represent\, simulate\, assist\, improve upon\, provide a surrogate for\, or replace the functioning of human minds. Concepts such as &ldquo\;optimization\,&rdquo\; &ldquo\;satisficing\,&rdquo\; and &ldquo\;superintelligence&rdquo\; run orthogonal to the classical concept of <em>mimesis</em>.</p>\n<p>At the same time\, developments in science and society have deeply challenged both <em>mimesis</em> and mindedness as concepts and ideals. Darwinian and embodied cognitive approaches challenge the primacy of abstract reasoning over embodiment\; and reflections on human labor&rsquo\;s relation to material (re-)production\, social stratification\, and human experience from Marx\, Wallerstein\, Pasquinelli and others call into question the social &ldquo\;value-added&rdquo\; of material imitations as well as the veracity of accounts of &ldquo\;intelligent&rdquo\; labor&rsquo\;s nature and origins. Deep divisions in the societal uptake of AI &ndash\; exemplified in anti-AI activism\, dueling governance regimes\, and popular critical slang like &ldquo\;AI slop&rdquo\; &ndash\; exemplify and give opportunity to inform these theoretical challenges.</p>\n<p>Orientation to these developments requires approaches that scholars in the humanities may be uniquely positioned to provide. We hereby announce a three‑day workshop on &ldquo\;Intelligence and Imitation: Mind\, Mechanism\, Mimesis&rdquo\; for presentation and discussion of new humanities research engaging with this&nbsp\;theme.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>Our aim is to foster a collective critical engagement with AIs in their history\, socioeconomic context\, architecture\, and other dimensions of significance with the assistance&nbsp\;of resources from literature\, philosophy\, history\, or other humanities fields. We invite contributions from both early‑career (including graduate students)&nbsp\;and established&nbsp\;academic researchers\, whose work-in-progress&nbsp\;projects&nbsp\;straddle disciplinary boundaries&nbsp\;to illuminate aspects of the diverse mind-machine relations exemplified in AI&rsquo\;s history\, current reality\, and imagined futures.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>Some possible avenues&nbsp\;of investigation include: &nbsp\;</p>\n<ul>\n<li>Mimesis and mechanical imitation from antiquity to the transformer &nbsp\;</li>\n<li>Transformer architecture&nbsp\;and the hermeneutic circle of understanding&nbsp\;</li>\n<li>Political economy and ideology of digital infrastructures&nbsp\;sustaining LLMs&nbsp\;&nbsp\;</li>\n<li>New histories and historical perspectives on literary&nbsp\;cybernetics&nbsp\;and natural language processing (NLP) &nbsp\;</li>\n<li>Hybridity and joint agency between humans and LLMs&nbsp\;</li>\n<li>Anthropomorphism and human relations with the (in)animate&nbsp\;</li>\n<li>Emotional AI as mimesis or optimization&nbsp\;</li>\n</ul>\n<p><br> In addition to presented papers\, some time at the conference will be devoted to reflection on &ldquo\;humanities of AI&rdquo\; as a research domain\, including its current state and possible futures\, disciplinary articulation\, conditions of success\, relations with natural and social sciences\, and potential impact on sociotechnical systems involving AI.&nbsp\;&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>&nbsp\;<br> <u>Featured Speakers</u>&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><strong>Yulia Frumer</strong>\,&nbsp\;Bo Jung and Soon Young Kim Professor of East Asian Science\, Johns Hopkins University\; Author of &ldquo\;Cognition and emotion in Japanese humanoid robots\,&rdquo\;&nbsp\;<em>History &amp\; Technology</em>&nbsp\;(2018) and&nbsp\;<em>Making Time: Astronomical Time Measurement in Tokugawa Japan</em>&nbsp\;(Univ. of Chicago Press\, 2018)</p>\n<p><strong>Steven Gross</strong>\, Professor of Philosophy\, Johns Hopkins University\; Author of Meaning without Representation: Expression\, Truth\, Normativity\, and Naturalism (Oxford Univ. Press\, 2015)</p>\n<p><strong>N. Katherine Hayles</strong>\, Distinguished Research Professor at the University of California\, Los Angeles\, and the James B. Duke Professor Emerita from Duke University\; Author of <em>Bacteria to AI: Human Futures with Our Nonhuman Symbionts</em> (Univ. of Chicago Press\, 2025)\, <em>Unthought: The Power of the Cognitive Nonconscious</em> (Univ. of Chicago Press\, 2017) and <em>How We Think: Digital Media and Contemporary Technogenesis</em> (Univ. of Chicago Press\, 2015)</p>\n<p><strong>Matthew L. Jones</strong>\, Smith Family Professor of History\, Princeton University\; Author (with Chris Wiggins) of&nbsp\;<em>How Data Happened: A History from the Age of Reason to the Age of Algorithms&nbsp\;</em>(Norton\, 2023)</p>\n<p><strong>Matthew Kirschenbaum</strong>\, Commonwealth Professor of AI and English\, University of Virginia\; Author of&nbsp\;<em>Bitstreams: The Future of Digital Literary Heritage</em> (Univ. of Pennsylvania Press\, 2021)</p>\n<p><strong>Patrick McCray</strong>\, Professor of History\, University of California\, Santa Barbara\, Kluge Chair in Technology and Society (2025) at&nbsp\;the Library of Congress (2025)\; Author of<em>&nbsp\;README: A Bookish History of Computing from Electronic Brains to Everything Machines&nbsp\;</em>(MIT Press\, 2025)&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><strong>Alexander Williams Tolbert</strong>\, Assistant Professor of Data and Decision Sciences\, Emory University\; Author of &ldquo\;Why Causal Inference is Necessary for Algorithmic Fairness\,&rdquo\; <em>Synthese </em>(2025) and &ldquo\;Causal Agnosticism about Race: Variable Selection Problems in Causal Inference\,&rdquo\; <em>Philosophy of Science</em> (2024).</p>\n<p><u>&nbsp\;</u></p>\n<p><u>Submission Instructions</u></p>\n<p>Submit a single Word or PDF file to <strong>Jiantong&nbsp\;Liao</strong> (<a target="_blank">jliao20@jh.edu</a>) by <strong>January 31</strong>&nbsp\;containing: (i)&nbsp\;an abstract roughly 300 words\; (ii) a short bio including your name\, institutional affiliation\, and contact email\; and (iii) up to five key words. Decisions will be communicated within one month of the deadline. Authors of accepted abstracts will be asked to send up to 3000&nbsp\;words (a short paper or portion of a paper-in-progress) for distribution before the workshop. Questions may be directedto the address above.</p>\n<p><br> <u>Supporting Institutions</u></p>\n<p>Alexander Grass Humanities Institute\, Johns Hopkins University<br>(<a target="_blank">https://krieger.jhu.edu/humanities-institute/</a>)</p>\n<p>Center for Equitable AI &amp\; Machine Learning Systems (CEAMLS)\, Morgan State University<br>(<a target="_blank">https://www.morgan.edu/ceamls</a>)&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><br> <u>Organizing Committee</u></p>\n<p><strong>Jiantong Liao</strong> (Chair)<br> PhD Student\, German Program\, Department of Modern Languages and Literatures<br> <a href="mailto:jliao20@jh.edu">jliao20@jh.edu</a></p>\n<p><strong>Ksenia Tatarchenko</strong> (Faculty Sponsor)<br> Faculty\, Medicine\, Science &amp\; Humanities Program\, Johns Hopkins University<br> <a href="mailto:ktatarc1@jh.edu">ktatarc1@jh.edu</a></p>\n<p><strong>Phillip Honenberger</strong> (Faculty Sponsor)<br> AI Ethicist &amp\; Researcher\, Center for Equitable AI &amp\; ML Systems (CEAMLS)\, Morgan State University<br> <a href="mailto:jaywilliam.honenberger@morgan.edu">jaywilliam.honenberger@morgan.edu</a></p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Phillip Honenberger;CN=Jiantong Liao;CN=Ksenia Tatarchenko:
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