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Journal Article
the minnesota review (2023) 2023 (100): 118–131.
Published: 01 May 2023
... that have already been marked as candidates for some form of consciousness. In this article, we ask if humans can co-create with nonhuman systems and, more specifically, artificial intelligence (AI) systems. To find out, we interviewed more than thirty artists, journalists, curators, and coders...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2023) 2023 (101): 84–99.
Published: 01 November 2023
...) and the Flusserian aperture (i.e., opening). Deleuze and Guattari (1987: 25) point out that the middle is where things pick up speed. Between humanity and its artificially intelligent counterparts, between carbon-based intelligence and siliconbased intelligence, a liminal space conducive to inventiveness has emerged...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2019) 2019 (93): 75–82.
Published: 01 November 2019
...) inspirational riff on a single passage from The Grun- drisse in Empire through Assembly, the general intellect is not, or not yet, a common intellect, and some even believe artificial intelligence will sublate such free association in advance of its concretization. The sub- ject of the commons is riven...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2023) 2023 (101): 79–83.
Published: 01 November 2023
... Verhoeff Nanna . 2022 . Critical Concepts for the Creative Humanities . Lamham, MD : Rowman & Littlefield . https://rowman.com/webdocs/CriticalConceptsCriticalHumanitiesOA.pdf . van Eekelen Bregje F. 2017 . “ Creative Intelligence and the Cold War: US Military Investments...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2021) 2021 (96): 56–68.
Published: 01 May 2021
... animals threaten to pull us back into anthropomorphic projection, outdated discussions of subjectivity, agency, intelligence, and language. But they also threaten the Anthropocene framework, as Lorimer (2015: 20) wrote: There are long, fraught histories of interspecies exchange that precede the originary...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2013) 2013 (80): 145–158.
Published: 01 May 2013
... is “in a state of potentiality”; it is in this way that the intellect can be said to be passive (Ia, q. 79, a. 2, 148–53). The intellect is not wholly passive, however. The Platonic under- standing that form (“species,” or ideas) exists apart from matter, mak- ing it immaterial and thus intelligible...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2016) 2016 (87): 116–138.
Published: 01 November 2016
... to capital’s control over this collective intelligence through ownership of digital platforms and the use of digital rights” (Koloğlugil 2015, 135). In other words, insofar as creativity cannot be isolated from the cre- ator, capitalist profits are generated instead through the “artificial” ownership...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2007) 2007 (68): 137–146.
Published: 01 May 2007
...’ and are not mutually intelligible with others that we call ‘German.’ A standard remark in introductory linguistics courses is that a language is a dialect with an army and a navy (attributed to Max Weinreich). (Knowledge of Language 15) The notion...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2006) 2006 (67): 105–122.
Published: 01 November 2006
... who had begun to direct their lists towards one another. I suppose you can make a somewhat artificial decision, “We are going to be the main press in law.” We’ve been doing some of that, making decisions about where our real emphasis is going to be, but I...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2022) 2022 (99): 60–76.
Published: 01 November 2022
... in line with what Jameson (1988: 356) writes about cognitive mapping. On the one hand, there is the vision of some (unrepresentable, imagined) global social whole. Mapping is about giving this purely imaginary picture an aesthetic form, making it intelligible to the human body. For instance...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2016) 2016 (87): 57–75.
Published: 01 November 2016
... for the erection of intelligent stan- dards of criticism. It is their business. . . . Perhaps I use a distasteful figure, but I have the idea that what we need is Criticism, Inc., or Criticism, Ltd” (587–88). The “figure” or metaphor —​literary studies Herrnstein Smith...
Journal Article
the minnesota review (2012) 2012 (79): 137–156.
Published: 01 November 2012
...- tasy of producing artificial life-forms —living​ copies of living things. The phrase “cloning terror” refers to the fact that the war on terror had the effect of enhancing the terrorist program, paradoxi- cally producing more terrorists. Since the United States launched the war on terror...