Towards an organic Artificial Intelligence

  • Publish On 7 October 2021
  • Bruno Maisonnier
  • 4 minutes

What we are currently calling AI has, in fact, very little to do with intelligence, although it does indeed make use of tremendous memory capabilities and computing power. The leading figure of French robotics, Bruno Maisonnier, is engaged in the challenge of developing an AI operating like a brain, using very little energy and data, while also being capable of justifying decisions. Would this be an AI with self-learning capabilities?

Bibliography

explore

Article

Inclusive Intelligence

Nicolas Bourriaud

Article

Inclusive Intelligence

Artists are contemporaries of the transformations of their time and find themselves immersed in the biosphere, in a gesture of rupture from the dualisms of Western thought. Nicolas Bourriaud views this as stemming from “inclusive thought.” Far removed from the representations of human beings as positioned at the center of their “environment,” like figures against a background, inclusive art expresses a realization of our entanglement within all living milieux. Moving beyond the “formulas of subjugation” generated by binary thought and epitomized since Aristotle by the divide between matter and form, active and passive, and nature and culture, contemporary artists cooperate with the living and compose networks of relations.

Discover
Podcast

“ Meteorology as a Model of Thought. ”

Podcast

“ Meteorology as a Model of Thought. ”


Meteorology as a Model of Thinking

Anouchka Vasak is a lecturer in French literature. At the juncture between climate history and climate science, she elaborates a model of thinking based on meteorology, shifting like clouds. Her book 1797 – Pour une pensée météore [1797 – For Meteorology as a Model of Thought] is its “Discourse on the Method”.

Discover
Article
Article

From Weak AI to Organic Artificial Intelligence

Artificial intelligence has taken center stage in forward-looking discourse on the city. In 2021, anticipating the advent of generative AIs, Bruno Maisonnier distinguishes between weak AI, which is less about intelligence than about computing power, and organic AI, developed on the model of the brain and social insects. Despite the risks inherent in the introduction of any new technology before its use has been regulated, Bruno Maisonnier offers an optimistic view of artificial intelligence, particularly with regard to the optimization of genetic engineering.

Discover