Artificial Intelligence and Human Orientation

Organized by Dr. Christoph Durt and Dr. Lucy Osler

Weekly meetings will take place on Mondays 9:30-11:15 a.m. (US Central Time), beginning on September 15, 2025. There will be 8 seminar sessions.

 

Content

Artificial Intelligence (AI) transforms not only how we find our way on the internet and in the world, but also how we relate to each other and how we conceive of ourselves. In all these ways, AI becomes increasingly intertwined with human orientation, which it thus transforms. This raises new philosophical questions. How does human intelligence differ from artificial intelligence? How do these differences apply to concepts such as consciousness, thinking, understanding, and communication? Who are we as a species, and what is our relationship to technology?

In this third seminar on “Artificial Intelligence and Human Orientation,” we will focus on how new technological developments impact and reshape our understanding of reality and discuss several key topics:

  • The technologies behind Large Language Models (LLMs) like ChatGPT
  • The notion of ‘understanding’ in the context of embodied organisms vs. AI
  • The conception of ‘truth’ in artificial vs. human intelligence
  • AI-altered forms of communication and their impact on power and politics

We will build on concepts from Werner Stegmaier’s What is Orientation? A Philosophical Investigation (2019) and connect them to contemporary papers on AI and its impact on language, understanding, embodiment, and democracy. Some of the authors we discuss, as well as an LLM specialist, will join the respective seminar sessions (names will be announced here soon).

This seminar is discussion based; this means participants are expected to read the respective passages before each session. The seminar is free, but the number of participants may be limited to ensure quality discussion. Please apply by September 8, 2025, via the application form below by briefly explaining 1.) your affiliation and your professional/academic background, 2.) your philosophical interests, and 3.) your motivation for joining the seminar (max. 100 words per field).

Application Form

    To apply, please send a short text briefly describing: