
Humanities in the Time of AI
Laurent Dubreuil(Author)
University of Minnesota Press
Published on 1. April 2025
Book
Paperback/Softback
104 pages
978-1-5179-1904-7 (ISBN)
Description
Why AI offers a chance for the humanities to strengthen their relevance and significance
If humanistic research consists of the generation of consensus positions, simple expression, summarized texts, or passable translations, then we have arrived at the place where AI is able to accomplish these different missions to a convincing degree. However, Laurent Dubreuil argues, such tasks do not, in any way, constitute the humanities. On the contrary, he posits, a maximalist take on scholarship would not focus on generation but on creation, as a subject and as an object. Dubreuil seizes the opportunity of what AI reveals about the meaning of humanistic inquiry to offer a path for the renewal of the humanities on transhistorical, transcultural, and transdisciplinary grounds.
If humanistic research consists of the generation of consensus positions, simple expression, summarized texts, or passable translations, then we have arrived at the place where AI is able to accomplish these different missions to a convincing degree. However, Laurent Dubreuil argues, such tasks do not, in any way, constitute the humanities. On the contrary, he posits, a maximalist take on scholarship would not focus on generation but on creation, as a subject and as an object. Dubreuil seizes the opportunity of what AI reveals about the meaning of humanistic inquiry to offer a path for the renewal of the humanities on transhistorical, transcultural, and transdisciplinary grounds.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Minnesota
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
1 black and white illustration
Dimensions
Height: 177 mm
Width: 126 mm
Thickness: 10 mm
Weight
140 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-5179-1904-7 (9781517919047)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Laurent Dubreuil is professor of comparative literature, Romance studies, and cognitive science at Cornell University, where he founded the Humanities Lab. He is author of many books, including The Intellective Space: Thinking beyond Cognition and, with Sue Savage-Rumbaugh, Dialogues on the Human Ape, both published by the University of Minnesota Press.
Content
Contents
1. An Essay in Paradoxical Optimism
2. Perspectives and Disciplines
3. AI Is Us
4. We Are Not AI
5. Naming the Human(ities)
6. The Ongoing Reprogramming
7. A Turing Intermezzo
8. The Oeuvre of the Humanities
9. A Platonic Interlude
10. The Ethical Fallacy
11. Descriptions and Interpretations
12. Corpus Expansions
13. Dilettantes and Technicists
14. Subjects and Persons
15. An Opening
Acknowledgments
1. An Essay in Paradoxical Optimism
2. Perspectives and Disciplines
3. AI Is Us
4. We Are Not AI
5. Naming the Human(ities)
6. The Ongoing Reprogramming
7. A Turing Intermezzo
8. The Oeuvre of the Humanities
9. A Platonic Interlude
10. The Ethical Fallacy
11. Descriptions and Interpretations
12. Corpus Expansions
13. Dilettantes and Technicists
14. Subjects and Persons
15. An Opening
Acknowledgments