The impact of the digital world and its algorithms on human beings and societyWe read all sorts of things about AI, as the promise of a future happiness or as a threat capable of putting an end to humanity. While we cannot be "for" or "against" AI – it’s already here, and not likely to disappear any time soon - the question we face is how to exist as human beings - individually, socially, collectively - in a world governed by algorithms. Since the dawn of humanity, technological objects have intersected with the human mind: it is we who have shaped them; but as we use them, they in turn shape our brain. With the development of new technologies, this hybridization is becoming more and more apparent, and machines now threaten to colonize us, if we use them badly. AI allows us to make many kinds of work easier, but these benefits often come at the cost of reducing a person to a set of micro-data, far removed from the human characteristics that define him. Worse yet: the whole economy is now subject to the "decisions" suggested by machines. We have entered an era of algorithmic governmentality, in which leaders have deliberately delegated their decision-making to AI.How, then, can we still talk about democracy? And consequently, how can we organize collective action, confronted by a power that is based on the supposed infallibility of machines? Benasayag gives his considered answers in this short but illuminating book, a hybrid of essay and interview.
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The impact of the digital world and its algorithms on human beings and society
A hybrid of essay and dialogue in which anthropologist Régis Meyran and philosopher Miguel Benasayag ask one of the fundamental questions of our time: how are humans meant to live in the time of the machine? Benasayag is a fascinating character in his own right — psychoanalyst, victim of torture by the Argentine junta and one-time resistance fighter. He accepts algorithms are inevitable, but what does their rise mean for such essential concepts as democracy and free will?
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781787702929
Publisert
2021-05-13
Utgiver
Vendor
Europa Compass
Høyde
120 mm
Bredde
180 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
128

Forfatter
Oversetter

Biographical note

Miguel Benasayag is a philosopher and psychoanalyst. Born in Argentina, during the dictatorship he suffered incarceration and torture. He now lives in Paris. One of the founders of the cultural collective «Malgré Tout», he is the author of several books on various aspects of social science. The Tyranny of Algorithms is his English debut. Steven Rendall has translated ninety-six books from French and German, four of which have won major translation prizes. His translations for Europa Editions include Disturbance by Philippe Lançon (2019) and The Tyranny of Algorithms by Miguel Benasayag (2021). He is professor emeritus of Romance Languages at the University of Oregon. He lives in France.