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Irrationality and the Age of AI


  • Universitätsclub Bonn 9 Konviktstraße Bonn, NRW, 53113 Germany (map)

Conference

© Sira Schöneich

(click here to view the schedule)

The AI revolution has accelerated in recent years, propelled by the widespread use of large language models (LLMs). Today, AI systems are not only transforming technical environments but also shaping our thoughts, emotions, and everyday linguistic practices. Increasingly, AI research and industry are shifting their attention from rational problem-solving toward aspects of human life once considered the last bastions of humanity. We can contrast this approach to AI as a simulation of ‘rationality’ with the expansion of applications into the realm of the expression of emotions and other aspects of human life often seen as ‘irrational’.

Our conference will explore the role of affective computing, emotionally laden human-machine interaction, conversational AI models, reinforcement algorithms, and recommender systems in the wake of the LLM revolution. In this light, we will discuss what we can learn about language—both in its explicit, logical, grammatical structure and in its emotional, expressive dimension—when AI accesses these depths of human expression. We also ask what it means for humanity when even the ‘irrational’ aspects of life are no longer beyond the reach of digitalization. This raises the important question of how emotions and their various forms of bodily and linguistic expression are related and what it means for AI to detect and mass reproduce patterns in human behavior that are closely correlated with the emotional depth dimension of human life.

We will address a paradox of technological progress: the deeper AI mirrors the structural layers of the human mind through interdisciplinary breakthroughs, the more actually existing human irrationality becomes visible as social and political collateral damage. Simulating this irrationality, in turn, provides AI with new behavioral data, generating a non-rational feedback loop alongside the rational one—bringing both novel opportunities and risks.

These developments have profound normative consequences for social, political, and ethical thought and action. They raise urgent questions about the design of ethical AI that goes beyond regulatory compliance. Addressing these questions requires us to account for the transcultural differences that shape AI as a sociotechnological phenomenon. To this end, the conference will convene interdisciplinary expertise, industry perspectives, practical approaches, policy insights, and fundamental reflections in AI politics, ethics and philosophy. Our discussions will highlight technical dimensions of AI, its impact on human experience, culture, and society, and the philosophical, ethical, and normative frameworks for shaping desirable futures.




Schedule

This section will be updated continuously.

Click on the bold panel titles to read the abstracts.

Monday, May 18
TimeSession
09:00–09:30 Introduction and Welcome addresses
09:30–10:15 Talk by Prof. Markus Gabriel (Bonn)
10:30–12:30
  • Samuel Hill (DFKI): Dynamic Trust in AI. Intersecting Social Structures, Interpersonal Dynamics, and Adaptive Design.
  • Aisha Sobey (LCFI Cambridge): Creating Body Diversity in the Age of Generative AI.
  • Sneha Nair (London/Mumbai): When Care gets Coded.
  • Chelsea Haramia (CST Bonn): Technosignatures as Pollution: Dominance, Irrationality, and Unsustainable Technology.
12:30–13:30 Lunch
13:30–15:00
  • Claudio Rossi (Alma Mater Europaea): Eight Arms, Zero Score. Octopus Cognition and the Anthropomorphic Limits of AI Evaluation.
  • Ibiyinka Temilola Ayorinde (Idaban) and Oluseyi Ayodeji Oyedeji (Northhampton): Mitigating Hallucinations and Incoherent Reasoning in Large Language Models Using Neuro-Symbolic Knowledge Frameworks.
  • Leonardo Santa Maria (Civic AI): Parrots as World Makers.
15:15–15:45 AI Memory Box: Preserving Human Emotion in the Age of AI. Installation by Eslam El-Shamy and Mohamed W. Fareed (LO(C)AI).
16:00–17:30 Keynote: Emergent Emotions. The Future of Human-AI-Relationships. Keynote Lecture by Prof. Eva Weber-Guskar (Bochum).
19:00 Conference Dinner @ Eventmanufaktur
Tuesday, May 19
TimeSession
09:00–09:15 Intro
09:15–11:15
  • Rosalie Waelen (IWE Bonn): Towards a Theory of Recognition from Artificial Others.
  • Ferdinard Fosu-Blankson (Ghana): The Problem of Fading Identity and Human Dignity. Reincarnation and AI Replicas in the Age of Large Language Models.
  • Alexandria Irimia (Bonn) and Jonathan Foster (Stockholm): Rule by Algorithm. A Bureaucratic Horror Story.
  • Neely Myers (SMU): "Irrational" Intimacies: Youth and AI Companions.
11:30–12:30
  • Yasuo Deguchi (Program-Specific Professor, Institute for the Future of Human Society, Co-chairperson, Kyoto Institute of Philosophy).
  • Jun Sawada (Executive Chairman, NTT, Inc., Co-chairperson, Kyoto Institute of Philosophy).
  • Toshiaki Higashihara (Executive Chairman, Hitachi, Ltd., Director, Kyoto Institute of Philosophy).
12:30–13:30 Lunch
13:30–15:00
  • Marvin Tritschler (Stuttgart): On Expressive Form.
  • Nora Lindemann (Osnabrück): Should LLMs Testify? Situated Emotions, Performativity and AI-as-Witnesses.
  • Eduardo de la Cruz Fernández (Universidad Politécnica de Madrid): The Algorithmic Muse and the Expert Eye. Empirical Evidence of a Perception Gap in the Reception of Synthetic Poetry.
15:15–15:45 The Body & the Archive: Towards a Sonic Speculation. Artistic Intervention by Mona Hedayati (Cambridge).
16:00–17:30 Consciousness, Love, and the Fantasy of AI. Keynote Lecture by Prof. Alva Noe (Berkeley).
Wednesday, May 20
TimeSession
09:00–09:15 Intro
09:15–11:15
  • Zhang Shuangli (Fudan University): The Age of AI and the Efforts toward the Reconstruction of the Marxist Philosophy of Technology.
  • Daniel Sarafinas (East China Normal University): AI as a Discursive Object in China:  Key Narratives, Concerns, and Responses.
  • Song Fei (University of Singapore): Trustworthy AI and Human-AI Trust in China: Current Progress and Possible Future Direction.
  • Yan Junchi (Shanghai Jiao Tong University): AI advance in Research and Study in China: A Glance.
11:30–12:30 tba
12:30–13:30 Lunch
13:30–15:00
  • Tom Metcalf (IWE Bonn): Emotional-Conformity Machines. Large Language Models and the Suppression of “Outlaw Emotions”.
  • M. Nicole Horsley (Ithaca): Illegible Feelings. How Emotional AI Reproduces Racialized Irrationality.
  • Goda Klumbytė (Kassel): Understanding Beyond Reason. Feeling AI through Affective, Embodied, Material Interactions.
15:15–16:00 Voices That Don’t Train the Model: Kabiyè Knowledge and the Limits of AI (Carina Lange (DFKI), Seti Afanou, Morgan Clarke).
16:00–17:00 Outro













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May 12

Talk: AI Perspectives

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November 4

Conference: Philosophy of Technology and AI. Traditions, Transitions, and Tensions.