Technoartscience/Technosocioeconomy
A Multinarrative Approach to Digital Culture
Raimundus Lullus (Ramón Llull)
God and man, nature, art and science – The totality of knowledge, represented by a tree
How to combine elements of thinking, elements of language?
Mission statement: ‘Digital transformation’ is the expression that has been formulated to describe our age, however, we are starting to see that it is the human being that should be in the forefront of current development trends; no successful industrial revolution will be accomplished without bearing in mind basic human values, such as equality and responsibility.
The goal of this iASK Workshop Series is to shed some light on the frontiers of human and machine knowledge, and to initiate an international discourse on the intersections of humanity –and the Humanities– in the digitally driven revolution.
Date and time: 29th October 2019, 10.00 – 17.00
Venue: Institute of Advanced Studies Kőszeg, Kőszeg, Chernel st. 14. Bibó Room (2nd floor)
Program
10.00 – 13.00 Message from the Codices: a Contribution of Information History to Contemporary Debates on Digital Future and Digital Humanism
Guest and Keynote: Alistair Duff, professor of information policy, Edinburgh Napier University “Architects of the Information Age”
Introduction: László Z: Karvalics: Rethinking the Noosphere Through the Prehistory of the Internet: the 500-year-old Messages of Fernando Colón
Roundtable
13.00 – 14.30 Lunch
14.30 – 16.00 Discussion
16.00 – 17.00 Formulation of Joint Research Questions
Suggested papers to read:
Yasuhiko Genku Kimura: Technology, Art & Science of Homo Deus (pdf)
Mark Frazier: WhereTo and Why – the Co-Evolution of Art, Science, and Technology