XV INTERNATIONAL ONTOLOGY CONGRESS. 30th Anniversary Edition. The Issue of the Uniqueness of HUMANKIND
Workshops
- When
- 2023/10/03 - 2023/10/07
- Place
- Chillida-Leku Museum and UPV/EHU, Donostia / San Sebastián
- Organizers
- Gotzon Arrizabalaga (UPV/EHU), Juan Ramón Macuso (San Sebastián), José Ignacio Garparsoro (UPV/EHU), Bárbara Jiménez (UPV/EHU), Víctor Gómez Pin (UAB), Albert Sole (UAB), Javier Aguirre (UPV/EHU), Elide Pittarello (Università Ca' Foscari Venezia), Stefano Maso (Università Ca' Foscari Venezia), Davide Spanio (Università Ca' Foscari Venezia), Jon Umerez (UPV/EHU), Alberto García (UPV/EHU)
- Add to calendar
- iCal
SAN SEBASTIÁN (3-7 October 2023) - Chillida-Leku Museum and UPV/EHU
VENICE (9-10 October 2023) - Università Ca'Foscari
Special Session in A Coruña (26 October 2023) - Fundación Paideia-Galiza
THE ISSUE OF THE UNIQUENESS OF HUMANKIND
The humanist disposition continues to characterize the reactions we adopt to certain events and the assessment we make of them. Thus, we say that the behavior of this or that despot is inhuman and, on the contrary, whoever defends a general ecological cause such as the need for a rational distribution of water is honored with an international Human Rights Award. Likewise, those who show empathy with animals and rebel against their mistreatment are classified as humanists.
Does this mean unreservedly admitting a kind of irreducible uniqueness of human beings? Contemporary disciplines today force this properly philosophical interrogation: on the one hand, showing the high degree of genetic homology between human beings and certain animal species, or questioning the rigidity of the distinction between human language and animal signal codes; on the other hand, highlighting the impressive achievements of Deep Learning and other forms of artificial intelligence that seem to blur the border between human potential and that of certain machine entities.
The positions that can be adopted with respect to this issue are more diverse when the quantum theory of measurement is considered. Some interpretations seem to partially recover Einsteinian realism (at a certainly high price, thus sacrificing the locality or affirming the multiplicity of worlds) in such a way that the classical theory of knowledge as the adaptation of the human spirit to the environment would continue in force. Other interpretations seem to place man as an essential witness of the phenomena; the human mind is thus considered the ultimate measuring device in a kind of recovery of the Kantian transcendental subject.
In this regard, the words that Arthur Eddington wrote a century ago are significant:
"We have found that where science has progressed the farthest, the mind has but regained from nature that which the mind has put into nature. We have found a stranger foot-print on the shores of the unknown. We have devised profound theories, one after another, to account for its origin. At last, we have succeeded in reconstructing the creature that made the foot-print. And Lo! it is our own."
Eddington, A. S. (1920). Space, Time and Gravitation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 201.
Five thematic sessions will be organized in which the issue of the uniqueness of humankind will be contemplated from anthropological and historicist perspectives, considering the debates on the role of human beings within the different civilizations and throughout their evolution:
1. Artificial intelligence and human intelligence
a. What can and cannot be expected from the quantum computer?
b. Artificial intelligence and artificial life
c. The question of the legal status of machine entities
2. Animal condition and human nature: state of the art
a. Legal status of animals
b. Human language and animal signal codes
3. Human intelligence and the Kantian question of the tripartition of judgement
4. Debate on the human singularity in the history of ideas
5. The quantum measurement problem and the place of (human) consciousness in Physics
More information: https://www.ontologia.info/es/index.php