Many Worlds of AI: Conference Proceedings
You can look for particular papers/abstracts using the search box above. You can see the full list of suggested hashtags, denoting different stakeholder groups, specific countries, as well as specialists themes, here.
Concluding Remarks: Human co-becoming in the age of AI
by Prof. Markus Gabriel, Director of CST, University of Bonn
Keynote: Approaches to AI Ethics: “Sparks of Ideas” (Inspirations) from East Asian Philosophies
by Bing Song (Senior Vice President of the Berggruen Institute and Director of the Institute’s China Center)
Human First Innovation for AI ethics? : a Cross-cultural Perspective on Youth and AI
by Toshie Takahashi (Waseda University)
Exploring Children's Rights and Child-Centred AI
by Janis Wong, Morgan Briggs, Mhairi Aitken, Sabeehah Mahomed (Turing Institute)
An Approach Based in Eastern Philosophy to Identify Ethical Issues in Early Stages of AI for Earth Observation Research
by Mrinalini Kochupillai (Technical University of Munich)
Exposing AI as a World Object through Interdisciplinarity: The Case of Sustainable AI
Panel Discussion: Şebnem Yardımcı Geyikçi(University of Bonn), Tijs Vandemeulebroucke (University of Bonn), Larissa Bolte (University of Bonn) and Sophia Falk (University of Bonn)
Relational Philosophies and Ethical Diversity in the Intercultural Evolution of AI Ethics: A 'Disruptive' Conversation
Panel Discussion: co-organized with the Berggruen Center China
The Five Tests: Designing and Evaluating AI According to Indigenous Māori Principles
by Luke Munn (University of Queensland)
Korean value of ‘Jeong’
by Robert M Geraci (Manhattan College) and Yong Sup Song (Youngnam Theological Seminary)
Conceptions of Ethics in World-Making Machines: Colonial Iconographies of AI in Britain
by Peter Rees (We and I)
Praxis, or the Yugoslav Search for Man: Thinking and Human Self-Realization in the Age of Generative AI
by Ana Ilievska (Stanford University)
Islamic Ethical Discourse on AI: Three Challenges in Focus
by Mohammed Ghaly (Hamad Bin Khalifa University)
AI, Journalism, and the Ubuntu Robot in Africa: A quest for a normative framework
by Greg Gondwe (California State University - San Bernardino and Institute for Social Media Rebooting, Harvard)
Can the Ghost Worker Speak? De-colonializing Digital Labor
by Sergio Genovesi (University of Bonn)
To Build “Fairer AI”, First Thoroughly Understand “Fairness”: A Multidisciplinary Review Through an Intercultural Lens
by Was Rahman (Coventry University)
Towards a Praxis for Intercultural Ethics in Explainable AI
by Chinasa T. Okolo (Cornell University)