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[Commlist] CFP "Creativity After Automation" Special Issue Balkan Journal of Philosophy
Thu Aug 25 14:49:46 GMT 2022
Balkan Journal of Philosophy*
*CALL FOR PAPERS*
SPECIAL ISSUE of the/Balkan Journal of Philosophy/for 2023
*"CREATIVITY AFTER AUTOMATION"*
The new field of ‘computational creativity’(CC) (also known as
‘artificial’ or ‘algorithmic creativity’, ‘creative computation’ or
‘creative AI’) attracts growing popularity with the recent advances of
deep learning and other cutting-edge forms of machine learning
algorithms. During the past twenty years CC has grown into a discipline
of its own, part of the domain of artificial intelligence, which
explores ‘the capacity of machines to both generate and evaluate novel
outputs that would, if produced by a human, be considered creative’
(Veale and Cardoso, 2019: 2). The focus of computer scientists is
to/systematise/,/formalise/, and thus/automatise/what has once been
deemed a rationally inexplicable and almost supernatural capacity of
some human individuals to generate new ideas and artistic masterpieces.
In their attempts to mathematicize creative behaviour CC researchers
reduce creativity to specific processes, algorithms and knowledge
structures. At stake here is to program the least programmable, which is
the freedom to deviate from the program and from predetermined rules.
The goal is to design machines that produce outputs that are novel,
surprising and have value – all these judged by human users. Novelty,
surprise and value are the features of creativity advanced by Margaret
Boden (2004) along with her classification of the three types of
creativity: exploratory, combinational, and transformational.
The underlying assumptions about the concept of creativity, implied in
the technical formulations above have evoked the critical responses of
various humanities researchers, who have pointed out the reductiveness
and intrinsic contradictions in these definitions from aesthetic,
philosophical, and historical perspectives (see Still and d’Inverno
2016, Du Sautoy 2019, Fazi 2019, Zylinska 2020, Stephensen 2021). Some
of the researchers emphasise the historical richness and ambiguity of
the concept of creativity itself (Still and d’Inverno 2016) and, hence,
its ideological bias and political consequences (Stephensen 2021),
others insist on the intrinsic potential of algorithms for creative
expression according to their own nature (Fazi 2018), thus denouncing
the flaws of the ‘imitation game’ (Turing) and summon us to recognise
machine and other forms of intelligence and perception as co-creative
agencies (Zylinska 2020).
In light of these critiques we would like to pose the question of
automated creativity from at least three different perspectives: the
human-centred, the machine-centred, and the systemic.
Creativity is the last resort believed to be impenetrable to automation.
When fortress after fortress of ‘uniquely human’ cognitive capacities –
memory, reasoning, learning, intentionality, complex pattern
recognition, symbol manipulation, prognosis/prediction – fall one after
another to the computational logic of algorithmic automation, creative
imagination is still believed to symbolise every bit of what means to be
an embodied human being. Creativity as it was advanced by Kant’s theory
of the genius is radically opposed to imitation and pre-programmed rule
following. Illuminated by this understanding, computer scientists’
definition of creativity formulated in the footsteps of Turing’s
‘imitation game’ seems a contradiction in terms. On the other hand, the
proposed ‘mechanisation’ of the creative process calls for more nuanced
rethinking of the dynamics between imitation and originality, and has to
be considered as a potential challenge of the very notion of individual
authorship and human exceptionalism.
The second direction questions the notion of automation itself. Thinking
about automated creativity we imagine the mechanical automatons of
Descartes and nineteenth century industrial machines, their operation
fully controlled by predetermined procedures. However, as Yuk Hui (2019)
and other researchers have shown, machines after mid-twentieth century
cybernetics are becoming less and less mechanical and more and more
lifelike. While deterministically driven mechanisms break if they
accidentally deviate from their predetermined program, cybernetic
systems are open to contingency and incorporate it as part of their
operative power. Thus, instead of mindlessly repeating the same outcome
over and over, cybernetic machines utilise feedback, thereby generating
novelty at every recursive turn.
We could return to the question of creativity again, going this time
beyond the dichotomy between human and machine. If we consider
creativity as the force that brings forth the new into the world, a
force, which is universal, how could we think of computation as
creative? How can we reimagine the concept of computational creativity
as a shifting/epistēmē/, an underlying sensibility in the sense advanced
by Hui (2019, 2021), which sets the conditions of our existence in
relation to the cosmos and which, consequently, demands from us to
generate new syntheses of thought? From this perspective, the question
of computational creativity needs to be articulated in light of
algorithmic logos creating systemic conditions for structural
transformation of the world, reconfiguring the bonds between space-time,
objects and actions. It is a new algorithmic governmentality operating
beneath the surface, which Benjamin Bratton (2015) termed ‘the stack’ –
a megastructure of multiple layers of systemic organisation stretching
at a planetary scale, which follows the contingencies of its own
internal logic. If the current creative power of computation is rather
systematizing and totalising, tunnelling the future into mere
probability of the past, what forms of resistance to this closure could
we think of? How can we mobilise this creative power in the opposite
direction so that it generates diversification and radical openness of
the future?
The discussions in this special issue are invited to go beyond the mere
opposition between automation and creativity and mobilise cosmotechnical
(Hui) interpretations of computational creativity from
non-anthropocentric, Indigenous, Afrofuturist, post-communist, East
Asian, techno- feminist and other embodied localities, cultural
intuitions and technogeneses.
Possible topics could include (but are not limited to) the following:
* Creativity and automation
* Creativity and cosmotechnics (Hui)
* Automation and de-automation
* Computational aesthesis (Fazi)
* Computational creativity and deindividuation of authorship
* Computational creativity and systematization
* Planetary scale (Bratton) creativity, the noosphere (de Chardin)
* Computational logic and aesthetic sensitivity
* Techno-logos, instrumentality, creativity
* Technological innovation, scientific discovery and artistic
creativity/Tertiary protention/(Hui) and creativity
* Creativity and recursivity
* Creativity and the ‘imitation game’ (Turing)
Confirmed contributions by*Yuk Hui*and*Anna Longo*.
Submitted papers should not exceed 8,000 words (including references, an
abstract of about 150 words, and a short list of keywords). Papers
should be sent to the journal’s email address
at:*(balkanjournalofphilosophy /at/ gmail.com)*
<mailto:(balkanjournalofphilosophy /at/ gmail.com)>.
SUBMISSION DEADLINE:*December 30, 2022*.
This special issue will appear in*2023*.
* The/Balkan Journal of Philosophy/ is indexed in Scopus and Web of Science.
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