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intelligence
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Journal Article
Qui Parle (2021) 30 (1): 119–157.
Published: 01 June 2021
...Brett Zehner Abstract This methodologically important essay aims to trace a genealogical account of Herbert Simon’s media philosophy and to contest the histories of artificial intelligence that overlook the organizational capacities of computational models. As Simon’s work demonstrates, humans...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2024) 33 (1): 63–78.
Published: 01 June 2024
.... Where Heidegger claimed that Gerede (idle talk) is based on “groundlessness” and “indifferent intelligibility,” this essay shows that rumors in Murnau’s films are often well-founded and also essential to a nuanced understanding of his work. Bringing together film analyses, archival materials...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2021) 30 (1): 159–184.
Published: 01 June 2021
... theory of the mind already far more advanced than the theory of symbolic artificial intelligence, whose birth is redundantly celebrated in 1956 with the exalted Dartmouth workshop. In this text Hayek provided a synthesis of Gestalt principles and considerations of artificial neural networks, even...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2024) 33 (2): 347–362.
Published: 01 December 2024
...Won Jeon [email protected] A review of Matteo Pasquinelli , The Eye of the Master: A Social History of Artificial Intelligence ( London : Verso , 2023 ). Cited in the text as TEM. Copyright © 2024 Editorial Board, Qui Parle 2024 Matteo Pasquinelli distinguishes The Eye...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2021) 30 (1): 1–17.
Published: 01 June 2021
... in the form of a system, an ecology, an assemblage, in short, as a network. Alexander R. Galloway, “Network Pessimism” It no longer registers as a shock to hear proclamations of an emerging age of networks, of algorithms, of artificial intelligence, of machine learning, robotics, ubiquitous digital...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2008) 17 (1): 41–62.
Published: 01 June 2008
..., rehabilitating a way of constituting
with consistency other schemas of intelligibility and varying them
according to other syntagmatic chains. This other logic would be
opposable to the one Kant called classical, which had entrusted
its descriptions, inferences, and causalities to a predicative...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2015) 23 (2): 215–227.
Published: 01 December 2015
...-
tigating the operative elements fl owing underneath the activities
associated with intelligence. . . . In so doing, we seek to undermine
the stereotypical usage of the word ‘intelligence.’ In short, if labor
is tilling a fi eld, then the labor of intelligence is tending a garden...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2008) 17 (1): 3–40.
Published: 01 June 2008
... distinctively social
feature of the human being (language, politics, science, etc will
supposedly furnish a space of intelligibility by which the strange
particularity of the other’s traits—its “subjectivity,” “corporeal-
ity,” “aesthetics,” and so on—can be contrasted with those of the
modernity...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2005) 15 (2): 51–104.
Published: 01 December 2005
...," as Coleridge put
it, between subject and object.
The philosophy and poetry of the post-Enlightenment, in a
quest growing ever more pronounced, desperate, and self-con-
scious, for what Donne called an "intelligent heart" — a unified
sensibility by means of which man...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2009) 17 (2): 59–83.
Published: 01 December 2009
... we lament that larger, vague organizations (advertising
companies, intelligence services) construct our desires and control
our lives.2 Why do we require other agencies to act on our be-
half? What is our investment in proclaiming our own ineluctable
disempowerment...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2018) 27 (2): 269–289.
Published: 01 December 2018
.... But as the films move on, this time of succession appears to be haunted by other times: some scenes represented in the continuity of the present seem to be intelligible only as memories of the past; a character who apparently left his barrack to go to work reappears in an art museum where he has nothing to do...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2008) 17 (1): 193–197.
Published: 01 June 2008
... others have
maintained that it serves as a distraction from the real project of
material redistribution.3 Still others have analyzed recognition as
simultaneously constraining and enabling: to recognize is to render
difference intelligible and therefore to bring those who were...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2015) 23 (2): 135–160.
Published: 01 December 2015
... of intelligibility” of tropical pathol-
ogy. This regime of “racial hygiene” as he calls it served as “a
mode of population management and identity formation,” disci-
plining native corporeal and social practices to contain their pre-
dispositions to be bearers of disease and contamination, shaping
the way...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2008) 17 (1): 125–145.
Published: 01 June 2008
... that endures, which is not that scientific time represented
as trajectory? The answer is: with the same words provided to us
by ordinary language (the only one we have), but with a twist—
meaning that we have to speak the language of intuition using the
one, created by habit, of analytical intelligence...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2011) 19 (2): 299–308.
Published: 01 December 2011
...
the perceived dichotomy between things and ideas, arguing that
matter and knowledge are intertwined through practices. To pur-
sue this argument, Stengers examines the history of physics, layer-
ing together competing modes of intelligibility to show how the
physical world is informed...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2011) 19 (2): 57–84.
Published: 01 December 2011
...
key) technology. Action takes place within or in front of such digi-
tal set pieces, and it is in this vein that volumes devoted to the ar-
tifi cial intelligence (AI) of games carefully outline the behavior of
non-player characters (NPCs) and monsters (mobiles), but leave
the articulation...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2001) 13 (1): 171–176.
Published: 01 June 2001
... at this stage are to
some extent philosophical ones. . .These are not illustra-
tions of ideas. . .What needs reiteration is that we have here
a visual intelligence of a high order that is simultaneously
preoccupied by what also preoccupies philosophers and
the literary mind...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2013) 22 (1): 33–48.
Published: 01 June 2013
... of the nineteenth century. Contempo-
Fassin: The Predicament of Humanitarianism 39
rary humanitarianism is inscribed in this dual etymological and
genealogical heritage of rationality and affectivity. To use Martha
Nussbaum’s oxymoron, it is “the intelligence of emotions” brought...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2018) 27 (2): 433–455.
Published: 01 December 2018
..., their most famous human advocate would not hold them up as promising best friends. “It would be hard if not impossible,” writes Jane Goodall, “to produce a chimpanzee who could live with humans and have anything like as good a relationship as we have with our dogs.” This is a matter not of intelligence...
FIGURES
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Journal Article
The New Conflict of the Faculties and Functions: Quasi-Causality and Serendipity in the Anthropocene
Qui Parle (2017) 26 (1): 79–99.
Published: 01 June 2017
..., and probabilistic models that together form reticulated artificial intelligence , that is, a generalized connectivity that processes the traces systematically and systemically generated by feedback loops capable of operating at speeds between 2 and 4 million times quicker than the noetic body and its nervous...
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