What Can't We Know About AI? | Knowing the Mind You're Working With | The Infinity Machine | and more...
Artificiality Summit 2026: What Can't We Know About AI? In the first of a series about our speakers
Our obsession with complexity as a route to making sense of AI.
In this episode, we speak with Julia Rhodes Davis, a Senior Advisor at Data & Society, about her recent report "Advancing Racial Equity Through Technology Policy" published by the AI Now Institute.
Grounding her work in the problem of causation, Alicia Juarrero challenges previously held beliefs that only forceful impacts are causes. Constraints, she claims, bring about effects as well, and they enable the emergence of coherence.
A research review of A Myriad of Tongues: How Languages Reveal Differences in How We Think by Caleb Everett.
Jai Vipra is a research fellow at the AI Now Institute where she focuses on competition issues in frontier AI models. She recently published the report Computational Power and AI which focuses on compute as a core dependency in building large-scale AI.
A research review of The Coming Wave: Technology, Power and the 21st Century’s Greatest Dilemma. by Mustafa Suleyman with Michael Bhaskar.
An interview with University of British Columbia professor, Wendy Wong, about her book We, the Data: Human Rights in the Digital Age.
Suddenly artificial intelligence shows signs of being smart like humans. AI has been advancing so swiftly that leading AI researchers and entrepreneurs predict that AI will soon surpass humans on all cognitive tasks—a milestone commonly referred to as Artificial General Intelligence, or AGI.
Higher ed grapples with AI: Student learning and job impact top concerns, but confidence and preparedness vary. Proactive dialogue on AI needed.
An interview with Chris Summerfield about his book Natural General Intelligence.
Artificiality Co-founders, Helen and Dave Edwards, gave a keynote presentation at Lane Community College on AI & Higher Education.
AI is changing how you think. Get the ideas and research to keep you the author of your own mind.