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Overview[edit]

Imagining AI: How the World Sees Intelligent Machines is an edited volume of book chapters. It draws attention to the range and variety of visions of a future with intelligent machines and their potential significance for the research, regulation, and implementation of AI. The book is structured geographically, with each chapter presenting insights into how a specific region or culture imagines intelligent machines. The contributors, experts from academia and the arts, explore how the encounters between local narratives, digital technologies, and mainstream Western narratives create new imaginaries and insights in different contexts across the globe. The narratives they analyze range from ancient philosophy to contemporary science fiction, and visual art to policy discourse. This is my sandbox.

Reviews[edit]

I'm going to add the review here. Maybe from this source.[1]

Chapters[edit]

1. Introduction, Stephen Cave and Kanta Dihal

2. The Meanings of AI: a Cross-cultural Comparison, Stephen Cave, Kanta Dihal, Tomasz Hollanek, Hirofumi Katsuno, Yang Liu, Apolline Taillandier, Daniel White

Part I. Europe

3. AI Narratives and the French Touch, Madeleine Chalmers

4. The Android as a New Political Subject: The Italian Cyberpunk Comic Ranxerox, Eleonora Lima

5. German Science Fiction Literature exploring AI. Expectations, Hopes, and Fears, Hans Esselborn

6. Automatic Gnosis: On Lem's Summa Technologiae, Bogna Konior

7. Boys from a Suitcase: The Evil Robot and the Funny Robot as the main AI Concepts in Science Fiction of the USSR, Anton Pervushin

8. The Russian Imaginary of Robots, Cyborgs and Intelligent Machines: A Hundred-Year History, 1. Anzhelika Solovyeva & Nik Hynek

Part II. The Americas and Pacific

9. Fiery the Angels Fell: How Hollywood Imagines AI, Stephen Cave and Kanta Dihal

10. Afrofuturismo and the Aesthetics of Resistance to Algorithmic Racism in Brazil, Edward King

11. Artificial Intelligence in the Art of Latin America, Raul Cruz

12. Imaginaries of Technology and Subjectivity: Representations of AI in Recent Latin American Science Fiction, Macarena Areco

13. Imagining Indigenous AI, Jason Edward Lewis

14. Maoli Intelligence: Indigenous Data Sovereignty and Futurity, Noelani Arista

Part III. Africa, Middle East, and South Asia

15. From Tafa to Robu: AI in the Fiction of Satyajit Ray, Upamanyu Pablo Mukherjee

16. Algorithmic Colonization of Africa, Abeba Birhane

17. Artificial Intelligence Elsewhere: The Case of the Ogbanje, Rachel Adams

18. AI Oasis? Imagining Intelligent Machines in the Middle East and North Africa, Kanta Dihal, Tomasz Hollanek, Nagla Rizk, Nadine Weheba, Stephen Cave

Part IV. East Asia

19. Engineering Robots with Heart in Japan: The Politics of Cultural Difference in Artificial Emotional Intelligence, Hirofumi Katsuno & Daniel White

20. Development and Developmentalism of Artificial Intelligence: Decoding South Korean Policy Discourse on Artificial Intelligence, So-Young Kim

21. How Chinese Philosophy Impacts AI Narratives and Imagined AI Futures, Bing Song

22. Attitudes of Thinkers in Pre-Qin Dynasty China to Mechanical Invention and Its Influence on the Development of Technology, Baichun Zhang and Miao Tian

23. Artificial Intelligence in Chinese Science Fiction: From the Spring and Autumn and Warring States Periods to the Era of Deng Xiaoping, Yan Wu

24. Algorithm of the Soul: Narratives of AI in Recent Chinese Science Fiction, Feng Zhang

25. Intelligent Infrastructure, Humans as Resources, and Coevolutionary Futures: AI Narratives in Singapore, Cheryl Julia Lee and Graham Matthews

References[edit]

  1. ^ "New book - Imagining AI: How the World Sees Intelligent Machines". lcfi.ac.uk. Retrieved 2024-03-05.