
Attentive or Absentminded: Habits of Mind in the Age of AI
April 10 @ 4:00 pm - 5:00 pm
A lecture presented by Meghan O’Gieblyn, author of God Human Animal Machine, and the essay collection Interior States, which won the 2018 Believer Book Award.
At a moment when we are outsourcing many intellectual and creative tasks to machines, it’s worth thinking about the point of thinking itself. Is it a means to an end, or an end in itself? Are humans just “stochastic parrots,” mindlessly producing language in a way that is not so different from AI, as some tech luminaries contend, or is there something more going on in our minds? While these questions may seem new, they harken back to older debates about the relationship between thought and language, freedom and necessity, and the fine line that exists between attention and automaticity. Long before the advent of digital technologies, two twentieth century philosophers, Hannah Arendt and Simone Weil, wrote about some of these questions through the lens of the technologies of their times. Their writing anticipates many of the challenges of the age of AI and calls attention to the more ordinary and insidious ways that consciousness becomes ossified by social convention, as well as the moral and political risks that arise when we fail to “think what we are doing.”
Golda Meir Library Fourth Floor Conference Center
April 10, 2025 | 4:00 -5:00 p.m. (refreshments at 3:30 p.m.)
Co-sponsored by the Center for 21st Century Studies’ AI and the Humanities Collaboratory, the UWM Office of Research, and the UWM Libraries.