A Billion Gadget Minds: Thinking Widgets, Data, Workflow
A Workshop at the Swedenborg Hall

A growing body of research, including literature on cognitive 
anthropology, software studies and cognitive capital suggests that 
whatever is called 'thinking' occurs amidst mechanisms, habits, codelike 
systems, devices and other formally structured means. If intelligence, 
far from being a property of 'the human', is an informal and provisional 
function of the ensemble of mechanisms and relations that comprise a 
social field, then we need to explore the co-relation of cultural and 
experiential practices, thought and intelligent devices.

This day-long workshop seeks to evaluate the ways in which contemporary 
hardware and software augment and distribute intelligence, as well as 
the ensemble of social relations which form around thinking practices as 
they synchronise, mesh, de-couple, breakdown and collapse with variable 
effects. Contributors are proposing analyses and discussions of thinking 
work as it is imbricated in cultural, material, corporeal, technical, 
economic and psychic practices, and adopt a range of disciplinary 
perspectives - from cognitive science and systems theory, through 
science and technology studies, to cultural theory and philosophy

Location: The Swedenborg Hall, 20-21 Bloomsbury Way, London, WC1A 2TH
Date: Thursday October 21st 2010
Time: 9.30 - 6.00

There is no charge for attending the workshop but numbers are 
restricted. We will be starting the workshop promptly at 10.00

Keynotes and Speakers (in alphabetical order)
Anna Munster Nerves of data: 'the neurological turn' in/against 
networked media
Mike Wheeler Thinking Beyond the Brain: Arguments and Implications

Ingmar Lippert Administering Carbon Thinking
Gabriel Menotti The interpenetrating boundaries between coding and 
computation in the performance of Livecoding
Luciana Parisi and Stamatia Portanova Soft thought in architecture and 
choreography
Chryssa Sdrolia Intelligent Accidents. Towards an Ethology of Mental 
Heterogeneity          Ting-jieh Wang Intelligence as system-specific 
property: systems, emergence, and structural coupling

For further information, please contact
Andrew Goffey, Matthew Fuller or Adrian Mackenzie at 
a.goffeyATmdx.ac.uk, m.fullerATgold.ac.uk or a.mackenzieATlancaster.ac.uk


_________________________________
Dr. Matthew Fuller
David Gee Reader in Digital Media

Centre for Cultural Studies
Goldsmiths College
University of London
New Cross
London SE14 6NW

e: [email protected]
t: +44 (0)20 7919 7206
w: http://www.goldsmiths.ac.uk/cultural-studies/staff/m-fuller.php
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