Co-organized by teams from Stanford University and University of California Davis, this event brings together a transatlantic group of scholars to discuss the social, historical, technical, and aesthetic entanglements of our computational images.
While popular discussions about queerness in video games often focus on big-name, mainstream games that feature LGBTQ characters, like Mass Effect or Dragon Age, Bonnie Ruberg pushes the concept of queerness in games beyond a matter of representation, exploring how video games can be played, inte
“served or served?” is a participatory modeling of parallel structures of servers, and inherent limits in the restricting protocols of the operations and architecture of the network.
Noë will look at some of the different things we do when we see and explore the idea that seeing has no natural or fixed nature. The problem of vision, even as this is framed by neuroscience or cognitive science, and by philosophy, is an aesthetic problem.
Co-organized by teams from Stanford University and University of California Davis, this event brings together a transatlantic group of scholars to discuss the social, historical, technical, and aesthetic entanglements of our computational images.
Futurity Factory is a one-day symposium that will bring together humanities faculty and graduate students to explore the agency of the arts and cultural production in shaping epistemic, technological and scientific change.
What is emptiness? Why is there very little academic vocabulary to talk about emptiness and
nothingness? Clearly, since its metaphysical foundations in classic Greek thought, the notion
of Being has occupied a privileged position in Western philosophy.
For this week's Colloquium, Professor Robert Skipper from the University of Cincinnati will be giving a talk titled, "PMS and Criminal Responsibility."
Here is the abstract to this week's Colloquium:
PMS and Criminal Responsibility
Robert Skipper
Department of Philosophy
University of Cincinnat
Futurity Factory is a one-day symposium that will bring together humanities faculty and graduate students to explore the agency of the arts and cultural production in shaping epistemic, technological and scientific change.
*This event has been relocated to 107 Art Annex*
The discussion will be based on the authors' essay collection, Making Kin Not Population: Reconceiving Generations (2018).
A conversation on methods and ethnographic research design
with Kris Peterson and Kaushik Sunder Rajan
Conversation will be based on pre-circulated materials and short presentations from the speakers.