Recent Publications (Page 13)
Artificiality Book Awards 2024
Congratulations to the authors of of the Artificiality Book Awards 2024!
What to Expect from Artificiality in 2025
We're excited for three new-ish programs from Artificiality in 2025.
AI Agents & the Future of Human Experience + Always On AI Wearables + Artificiality Updates for 2025
* Watch/Listen on YouTube and Spotify * Listen on Apple Science Briefing: What AI Agents Tell Us About the Future of
What’s Happening Now in AI Agent Software and Why It Matters
AI agents are evolving with orchestration layers enabling modular, autonomous systems beyond traditional SaaS, reshaping workflows, labor, and software design.
The Rise of AI Agents and What We May Never Understand
David Wolpert warns AI networks may evolve beyond human math, creating unpredictable, emergent intelligence that defies control and comprehension.
Doyne Farmer: Making Sense of Chaos
An interview with Doyne Farmer about complexity economics and his new book, Making Sense of Chaos: A Better Economics for a Better World.
The Imagining Summit: We Imagined and Hoped—and We Can't Wait for Next Year.
The Artificiality Imagining Summit 2024 gathered an (oversold!) group of creatives and innovators to imaging a hopeful future with AI. Tickets for our 2025 Summit will be on sale soon!
Learning, the Intimacy Economy, and the Future of Personhood
This week we dive into learning in the intimacy economy as well as the future of personhood with Jamie Boyle. Plus: read about Steve Sloman's upcoming presentation at the Imagining Summit and Helen's Book of the Week.
Learning in the Intimacy Economy
Explore the shift from the attention economy to the intimacy economy, where AI personalizes learning experiences based on deeper human connections and trust.
James Boyle—The Line: AI and the Future of Personhood
A conversation with Jamie Boyle, author of The Line: AI and the Future of Personhood
Helen's Books of the Week
As meta-researchers, we consume ideas and research from a variety of sources. Books, in particular, are an important source. And Helen reads a lot of them. Each week she profiles one book in our newsletter—and this is the the full list.