Absolutely Interdisciplinary 2021—Human and Machine Normativity: New Connections

OD
Olivia DiGiuseppe
Thu, Apr 15, 2021 6:52 PM

Good afternoon,

I am reaching out because our team at the Schwartz Reisman Institute thought perhaps your work in philosophy of science would interest you and your collaborators in our upcoming event; please see below. We look forward to welcoming a diverse group of subject matter experts to participate in this year’s event.

The Schwartz Reisman Institute for Technology and Society (SRI) at the University of Toronto presents:

[cid:image001.jpg@01D73206.F8A05A50]

Absolutely Interdisciplinary 2021—Human and Machine Normativity: New Connectionshttps://absolutelyinterdisciplinary.com/

Dates

June 16-18, 2021

About Absolutely Interdisciplinary

Understanding the capacities and limitations of complex new technologies like AI calls for more than just a technical perspective. Absolutely Interdisciplinary will convene researchers from across disciplines to build new, interdisciplinary approaches to advance our understanding of how to meet the challenge of ensuring AI and other powerful technologies promote human well-being. This year, Absolutely Interdisciplinary takes place virtually, with a one-day graduate workshop on June 16th, followed by four scheduled sessions across two days on June 17th and 18th. Visit the conference website for more informationhttps://absolutelyinterdisciplinary.com/ and register here.https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/absolutely-interdisciplinary-tickets-145537439399

About this year’s theme

Humans are a fundamentally normative species, with complex cognitive and social systems for shaping behaviour to implement collectively-determined values and norms in support of cooperation. Building AI systems that are robustly aligned with human values requires deep understandings of how these normative systems work. At the same time, advances in AI present unique opportunities to investigate and test what capacities contribute to our ability to build, maintain, and abide by norms. This year, Absolutely Interdisciplinary takes up the challenge of exploring these dynamics under the theme Human and Machine Normativity: New Connections.

Speakers

Jeff Clunehttp://jeffclune.com/research.html, Vincent Conitzerhttps://www.philosophy.ox.ac.uk/people/vincent-conitzer, Deborah Gordonhttp://web.stanford.edu/~dmgordon/, Mortiz Hardthttps://mrtz.org/, Joel Z. Leibohttp://www.jzleibo.com/, Sarah Mathewhttp://www.sarahmathew.net/, Deirdre Mulliganhttps://www.ischool.berkeley.edu/people/deirdre-mulligan, and Johanna Thomahttps://johannathoma.com/.

Registration and information

Questions?

Email hello@torontosri.camailto:hello@torontosri.ca

Best,

[F460175]
Olivia DiGiuseppe
Schwartz Reisman Institute for Technology and Society https://sr-institute.utoronto.ca/
University of Toronto
olivia.digiuseppe@utoronto.camailto:olivia.digiuseppe@utoronto.ca

Good afternoon, I am reaching out because our team at the Schwartz Reisman Institute thought perhaps your work in philosophy of science would interest you and your collaborators in our upcoming event; please see below. We look forward to welcoming a diverse group of subject matter experts to participate in this year’s event. The Schwartz Reisman Institute for Technology and Society (SRI) at the University of Toronto presents: [cid:image001.jpg@01D73206.F8A05A50] Absolutely Interdisciplinary 2021—Human and Machine Normativity: New Connections<https://absolutelyinterdisciplinary.com/> Dates June 16-18, 2021 About Absolutely Interdisciplinary Understanding the capacities and limitations of complex new technologies like AI calls for more than just a technical perspective. Absolutely Interdisciplinary will convene researchers from across disciplines to build new, interdisciplinary approaches to advance our understanding of how to meet the challenge of ensuring AI and other powerful technologies promote human well-being. This year, Absolutely Interdisciplinary takes place virtually, with a one-day graduate workshop on June 16th, followed by four scheduled sessions across two days on June 17th and 18th. Visit the conference website for more information<https://absolutelyinterdisciplinary.com/> and register here.<https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/absolutely-interdisciplinary-tickets-145537439399> About this year’s theme Humans are a fundamentally normative species, with complex cognitive and social systems for shaping behaviour to implement collectively-determined values and norms in support of cooperation. Building AI systems that are robustly aligned with human values requires deep understandings of how these normative systems work. At the same time, advances in AI present unique opportunities to investigate and test what capacities contribute to our ability to build, maintain, and abide by norms. This year, Absolutely Interdisciplinary takes up the challenge of exploring these dynamics under the theme Human and Machine Normativity: New Connections. Speakers Jeff Clune<http://jeffclune.com/research.html>, Vincent Conitzer<https://www.philosophy.ox.ac.uk/people/vincent-conitzer>, Deborah Gordon<http://web.stanford.edu/~dmgordon/>, Mortiz Hardt<https://mrtz.org/>, Joel Z. Leibo<http://www.jzleibo.com/>, Sarah Mathew<http://www.sarahmathew.net/>, Deirdre Mulligan<https://www.ischool.berkeley.edu/people/deirdre-mulligan>, and Johanna Thoma<https://johannathoma.com/>. Registration and information * Register for the conference at this link.<https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/absolutely-interdisciplinary-tickets-145537439399> Early-bird pricing is available until April 30, 2021. * Follow SRI on Twitter<https://twitter.com/TorontoSRI> and LinkedIn<https://www.linkedin.com/company/53504040/> for conference updates. * Share the conference announcement via this Tweet<https://twitter.com/TorontoSRI/status/1380192577631174665> or this LinkedIn post.<https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:6783460425938845696/> Questions? Email hello@torontosri.ca<mailto:hello@torontosri.ca> Best, [F460175] Olivia DiGiuseppe Schwartz Reisman Institute for Technology and Society <https://sr-institute.utoronto.ca/> University of Toronto olivia.digiuseppe@utoronto.ca<mailto:olivia.digiuseppe@utoronto.ca>