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SUMMARY:Our Tech\, AI and Society Dialogues    Artificial Humanities: A Fictional Perspective on Language in AI
DESCRIPTION: \n\nOur Tech\, AI and Society Dialogues \n\nAnthropos 
 Technicus \n(ἄνθρωπος τεχνικός) \n\n \n\nEvent 
 Details\n\nDate: Thursday\, March 19\, 2026\nHours: 6:30 to 8:30 PM 
 (Montréal Time)\nLocation: McGill Downtown Campus\, MacDonald Engineering 
 Building\, room 279. See map here. \nFormat: In-Person in Montréal (with 
 Dr. Nina Beguš joining us via Zoom)\n\nThis event is open to the public. 
 Please scroll down to secure your seat.\n\nSeries Description \n\nThis 
 series will delve into the ethical and societal implications of artificial 
 intelligence (AI) and other emerging technologies that call into question 
 conventional distinctions between human beings and machines. By exploring 
 thought-provoking books and films\, we aim to foster engaging discussions 
 and critical thought about the impact of technology on our lives. Each 
 session will focus on a specific work\, using it as a springboard to 
 discuss contemporary issues and concerns. \n\nArtificial Humanities: A 
 Fictional Perspective on Language in AI\n\nA conversation with Dr. Nina 
 Beguš about her latest book\n\nThis session will be held primarily in 
 English\, with the room discussion in person and Dr. Beguš participating 
 live via Zoom. Questions are welcome in English or French (we will 
 translate questions to her as needed during the session).\n\nOverview: 
 \n\n\n\nLet us discuss language\, fiction\, and the cultural aspects of 
 AI.\n\nIn Artificial Humanities\, Nina Beguš invites us to explore the 
 cultural and linguistic architectures that underpin AI's development: roots 
 that stretch far beyond hardware and software into narrative 
 traditions.\n\nWhile reflections like those in L’humanité artificielle 
 probe the ontological transformation unfolding between humans and 
 machines\, "What new hybrid being emerges\, and who is reborn?" This 
 dialogue turns toward a complementary dimension: the narrative inheritance 
 and symbolic structures that made such transformations conceivable in the 
 first place.\n\nArtificial intelligence did not begin with silicon alone. 
 It began with ideas and narratives.\n\nLong before large language models\, 
 Western culture imagined artificial beings who speak\, imitate\, seduce\, 
 assist\, and unsettle the human. From the Pygmalion myth to the Turing 
 Test\, intelligence has been framed through language performance\, and 
 humanity through the ability to pass as one of us.\n\nArtificial Humanities 
 explores this inheritance.\n\nRather than asking what machines are 
 becoming\, it asks\, "What narratives shaped the very idea that machines 
 must become human-like in order to count as intelligent?”\n\nIf AI 
 systems now co-produce meaning with us\, then the disciplines that study 
 meaning\, like literature\, philosophy\, linguistics\, and cultural 
 history\, are necessary for us to better understand and design AI 
 models.\n\nThis session invites us to examine AI not only as a new kind of 
 “Other” but also as a continuation of older symbolic structures and to 
 consider what it might mean to consciously participate in shaping 
 them.\n\nDiscussion Points\n\n\n	AI as cultural inheritance\n	How have 
 myths\, literary tropes\, and fictional archetypes shaped the goals and 
 metrics of artificial intelligence?\n	Language as epistemic authority\n	Why 
 has linguistic fluency become the dominant proxy for intelligence? What 
 assumptions does this carry?\n	Designing beyond imitation\n	What would it 
 mean to move from “AI that imitates humans” toward systems that explore 
 distinctly machinic capacities?\n	Authorship and co-creation\n	How do large 
 language models challenge long-standing concepts of originality\, 
 interpretation\, and creative agency?\n	\n	Humanities upstream\n	What role 
 might interpretive disciplines play not after deployment\, but during the 
 conceptual and architectural phases of AI development?\n	\n\n\nThese 
 questions will guide our conversation and encourage critical reflection on 
 how AI reshapes the conditions of being human.\n\nRecommended 
 Materials\n\n\n	\n	Primary text (optional but encouraged):\n	Artificial 
 Humanities: A Fictional Perspective on Language in AI by Nina Beguš.\n	Ann 
 Arbor: University of Michigan Press\, 2025.\n	\n\n\nThe book is available 
 in multiple formats and locations:\n\n\n	Open access (free) online: Read or 
 download it via the University of Michigan Press link: 
 https://press.umich.edu/Books/A/Artificial-Humanities3.\n	Amazon Kindle 
 (free).\n	Purchase options: Available for purchase at your favorite online 
 outlet.\n\n\nThe book has received recognition\, including being named a 
 2025 Artificiality Book Award winner\, and there are discussions\, 
 reviews\, and a book chat video available online. 
 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0yLMIPpHwqc \n\nWhile we encourage 
 participants to engage with these materials\, no prior reading is 
 required—come as you are. The dialecticians will offer a short framing 
 presentation before opening the floor to discussion. A private recording 
 (for internal note-taking only) may be made\; it will not be shared 
 publicly.\n\nSpecial Note: We encourage our authors and readers to engage 
 with the text\nDr. Beguš will send a handwritten note to participants who 
 have purchased a copy and would like it signed. Please have proof of 
 purchase available. Nabil will coordinate this activity.\n\nWhy 
 Attend?\n\n\n	\n	To rethink AI beyond hype and fear.\n	Move past purely 
 technical or dystopian narratives and explore AI through the lens of 
 language and narrative.\n	\n	\n	To gain a richer language for our 
 moment.\n	Deepen the philosophical and cultural dimensions of our Anthropos 
 Technicus series and develop concepts and metaphors that can help you 
 articulate what feels “new” about today’s technologies in your own 
 practice\, classroom\, or organization.\n	\n	\n	To connect human experience 
 and technological change.\n	Reflect on how AI intersects with our lived 
 realities: education\, work\, creativity\, care\, and vulnerability\, and 
 expand the dialogue between engineering\, philosophy\, and the 
 humanities.\n	\n	\n	To open a space for dialogue.\n	Join a structured yet 
 informal conversation about the symbolic foundations of AI\, where 
 questions\, doubts\, and disagreements are welcome.\n	\n	\n\n\nJoin us on 
 March 19 to explore these ideas together! \n\nThis session is open to 
 all!\n\n \n\nOur Dialecticians: \n\nDr. Nina Beguš\n\nNina Beguš is a 
 researcher at UC Berkeley’s Center for Science\, Technology\, Medicine & 
 Society. She leads the Artificial Humanities research group\, and two 
 funded projects on AI\, narration\, and culture. Her book\, Artificial 
 Humanities: A Fictional Perspective on Language in AI (2025)\, explores how 
 literature\, history\, and art can deepen our understanding of artificial 
 intelligence and its development. She is the editor of the forthcoming 
 volume First Encounters with AI: Writers on Writing (2026)\, featuring 
 essays by professional writers. Her recent papers focus on synthetic 
 imaginary and narratology (Experimental Narratives\, 2024) as well as the 
 literary exploration of latent spaces (Latent Spacecraft\, 2026). She 
 serves on The Public Interest Corpus and MLA Task Forces on AI and 
 collaborates with the tech industry on educational and policy approaches to 
 AI.\n\n\nDr. Sue Laver  \n\nInaugural director of the McGill Writing Centre 
 and a lecturer for many years in McGill’s Department of English\, Sue is 
 a Frankenstein aficionado. Her interest in Frankenstein began when she 
 first watched her now longstanding favourite “Frankensteinian” film 
 Blade Runner upon its theatrical release in 1982. Through various courses 
 on the gothic genre and its science fiction spinoffs\, Sue has guided 
 hundreds of students through Frankenstein’s philosophical complexities 
 and its afterlife in popular culture\, with emphasis on the metaphysical 
 and ethical status of the Monster and its technological descendants. 
 \n\nMr. Nabil Beitinjaneh\n\nBusiness Strategist and AI/ML/Analytics 
 Expert. Faculty Lecturer at the McGill School of Continuing Studies\, 
 focused on adult learners who want to upskill\, guiding learners on their 
 journey to become AI-savvy change-makers. Nabil is engaged in leadership\, 
 strategy\, and organizational development through events\, training\, and 
 his service with not-for-profit organizations. He is an ambassador for 
 TechAide which supports Centraide of Greater Montreal\, and the president 
 of Le centre culturel syrien. He is also on the leadership team of McCAIS\, 
 the SCS' Faculty Advancement Board\, and the MMA Advisory Council.\n\nShape 
 the Conversation\nAnthropos Technicus\, Our Tech\, AI and Society Dialogues 
 invites experts and enthusiasts to serve as dialecticians. Lead a session\, 
 guiding a discussion on a book or topic that explores technology's human 
 impact. To propose a topic or learn more\, reach out to Sue or Nabil at the 
 event.\n\nA shared resources site for Anthropos Technicus readings and 
 other resources has been set up on the Discord app at 
 https://discord.gg/huCCw5CR3C. Please join us!!\n \n\nThis event is a 
 collaboration between the McGill School of Continuing Studies\, the McGill 
 Computational and Data Systems Institute\, and the McGill Collaborative for 
 AI & Society.
ORGANIZER;CN="Nabil Beitinjaneh":MAILTO:nabil.beitinjaneh@mcgill.ca
CATEGORIES:
CONTACT;CN="Nabil Beitinjaneh":MAILTO:nabil.beitinjaneh@mcgill.ca
STATUS:CONFIRMED
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URL:https://mcgill-cdsi.libcal.com/event/4000416
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