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RCCHC "Science, Technology, Society and Culture" Talk Series #8 - The Space between 1s and 0s: Intentional Patiency in Computational Creativity

20231107_Haerin SHIN_Banner
  • Date

    07 Nov 2023

  • Organiser

    Research Centre for Chinese History and Culture

  • Time

    14:30 - 04:00

  • Venue

    Online via Zoom  

Speaker

Dr Haerin SHIN

Enquiry

Ms Waiyin PANG 34008921 rcchc@polyu.edu.hk

Summary

Challenging our kind’s self-reified monopoly over the domain of hermeneutics, computational creativity destabilizes the foundations of its lexical reference to invoke Walter Benjamin’s musings that herald the age of technological reproducibility. How may we delineate the parameters of creativity outside the bounds of apperceptive intent, especially if the generative process is strictly reliant upon conditional expressions of correlational nature rather than the transcendental aura of instantaneous inspiration? Should procedurally derived computational outputs deserve the label of creativity, then how does such developments affect and even reconfigure human language to challenge the metrics whereby we inscribe it with social value? By probing the interstitial space between algorithmic design and arbitrary semantics through readings of autonomously written fiction, this talk investigates how computational creativity remediates literary expressivity in text generating models. Based on the concept of intentional patiency, which I propose as an alternative to the agency of the phenomenological sovereign subject in the valuation and appreciation of nonhuman creativity, my talk asks what it means to write, and what writing means in an age when not only artistic output but also their creative agency may be approaching the event horizon of singularity in their technological reproducibility.

Keynote Speaker

Dr Haerin SHIN

Associate Professor of Media & Communication Studies

Korea University

Haerin Shin is an Associate Professor of Media & Communication Studies at Korea University. Shin’s research fields include Asian American literature, science fiction, and digital media with emphasis on artificial intelligence. She has written on cyberbullying, posthuman spirituality, techno-Orientalism, the ethics of artificial intelligence, and surveillance technologies, and is now working on a book on the representation of artificial intelligence in science fiction.

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