Poiêsis
how human and artificial epistemic agents
co-produce techno-scientific knowledge
Federica Russo
Philosophy & ILLC | Amsterdam
russofederica.wordpress.com| @federicarusso
2
Science
⇌
Technology
3
Phil Science
⇌
Phil Technology
How is knowledge generated
in techno-scientific contexts?
4
What is the role of instruments
in this process?
Overview
Motivation: Two episodes of techno-science
Exposure research and computational history of ideas
What is knowledge?
Received views from Phil Sci, Phil Tech, STS
Knowledge as Relational, Embodied, Distributed, Material
How is knowledge produced in techno-scientific practices?
Poiêsis: How human and artificial agents co-produce knowledge
The epistemic and normative aspects of poiêsis
5
Exposure research
6
• Sensors, smartphones, GPS
• Biobanks
• Omic technologies for biomarkers
identification and validation
• Liquid chromatography
• Mass spectometry
• Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy
• …
• Statistics softwares
Technologies are essential at all stages:
data generation and collection, analysis,
interpretation and theory building, …
7
Computational history of ideas
8
• Digitalisation of texts
• Various technologies for digitalising
and texts and make them
searchable
• Algorithm-based and ontology-based
searches
• These are not purely computational
methods
• Very large digital corpora
• Allows not just for more texts to be
analysed but for different types of
information to gather
Technologies open up novel spaces for
historical investigation
9
What is ‘knowledge’
in contexts like these?
10
What I could find in the literature
11
Mainstream PhilSci:
No instruments, all about
theory and propositional
content
PhilTech:
Instruments mediate or are
bearers of knowledge
STS:
‘Technocratic’ regimes
contribute to the
‘solidification’ of knowledge
What I am interested in
The process of knolwedge production, rather than solidification
How human epistemic agents use instruments to produce knowledge
What difference this makes to our conceptualisation of knowledge
12
What I need
A broad enough concept of knowledge
Many ways of generating knowledge: experiments, formal modelling, close
reading, theories and concepts, …
Many elements of knowledge: material, vernacular, formal, …
But mainly, instruments seem to do more than just
Mediating between us and the world
Augmenting our capacities to see the smaller or the bigger
Enhancing ability to analyse more data
13
Redesigning
the concept of knowledge
14
ReDiEM Knowledge
Knowledge is a product of techno-scientific activities carried out by epistemic agents, it is often
expressed in propositional form in natural language, it is also encapsulated in material objects,
and is situated with respect to a number of social, cultural, or material aspects
Not a definition, but a broad characterisation
Elements about Relation, Distribution, Embodiement, Materiality are as important as propositional
content and vernacularity
These elements are interrelated, rather than isolated
Any element can become more prominent, depending on the specific question at hand
My question, reformulated:
How to cash out the partnership of human and artificial agents
in the process of knowledge production?
15
Poiêsis
Or, how human and artificial epistemic agents co-produce knowledge
The legacy
From Greek thinking:
Poiêsis is about producting artefacts, it is about technê rather than epistêmê
At the root of the (alleged) superiority of epistêmê over technê
From contemporary Philosophy of Information
Poiêsis is (also) about producing the situations moral agents are in, and that are
subject to ethical assessment
Useful to reduce moral luck
17
The semantic space of the poiêsis
The poietic character of human epistemic agents:
The production of artefacts by human agents
A topos of Greek philosophy and of philosophy of technology, not my main interest here;
The production of knowledge by human epistemic agents;
An expansion of Phil Information ‘homo poieticus’ as moral agent, it includes human epistemic agents as
techno-scientists and as philosophers
The poietic character of artificial agents
The power of technical objects to interact and modify the environment
Digital and analogue technologies have this power (in degrees), we learn from Simondon
The partnership of human and artificial epistemic agents
This partnership comes with important responsibilities, both epistemic and moral ones
18
Why does it matter?
19
Knowledge production is distributed
Human and artificial epistemic agents produce knowledge
An epistemic point:
Knowledge production is not a prerogative of us human(s)
Technologies, the environment, materiality and embodiment, situatedness … are all essential
elements
A normative point
Distribution in the process of production of knowledge does not mean less responsibility from us
human epistemic agents
We still have responsibility for the knowledge we produce, the artefacts we design and develop, the
policies we implement, …
Epistemology and ethics must go hand in hand
20
A vision for the field
21
Philosophy of Science
Philosophy
of
Technology
Science and
Technology Studies
Ethics/
Political
Philosophy
Philosophy of
Techno-Science
The intellectual and academic space
where different perspectives and
traditions meet and fruitfuilly
dialogue about techno-science
22
The journey begins here
23
Poiêsis
how human and artificial epistemic agents
co-produce techno-scientific knowledge
Federica Russo
Philosophy & ILLC | Amsterdam
russofederica.wordpress.com| @federicarusso
Thank you for your attention

Poiêsis. How human and artificial agents co-produce techno-scientific knowledge

  • 1.
    Poiêsis how human andartificial epistemic agents co-produce techno-scientific knowledge Federica Russo Philosophy & ILLC | Amsterdam russofederica.wordpress.com| @federicarusso
  • 2.
  • 3.
  • 4.
    How is knowledgegenerated in techno-scientific contexts? 4 What is the role of instruments in this process?
  • 5.
    Overview Motivation: Two episodesof techno-science Exposure research and computational history of ideas What is knowledge? Received views from Phil Sci, Phil Tech, STS Knowledge as Relational, Embodied, Distributed, Material How is knowledge produced in techno-scientific practices? Poiêsis: How human and artificial agents co-produce knowledge The epistemic and normative aspects of poiêsis 5
  • 6.
  • 7.
    • Sensors, smartphones,GPS • Biobanks • Omic technologies for biomarkers identification and validation • Liquid chromatography • Mass spectometry • Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy • … • Statistics softwares Technologies are essential at all stages: data generation and collection, analysis, interpretation and theory building, … 7
  • 8.
  • 9.
    • Digitalisation oftexts • Various technologies for digitalising and texts and make them searchable • Algorithm-based and ontology-based searches • These are not purely computational methods • Very large digital corpora • Allows not just for more texts to be analysed but for different types of information to gather Technologies open up novel spaces for historical investigation 9
  • 10.
    What is ‘knowledge’ incontexts like these? 10
  • 11.
    What I couldfind in the literature 11 Mainstream PhilSci: No instruments, all about theory and propositional content PhilTech: Instruments mediate or are bearers of knowledge STS: ‘Technocratic’ regimes contribute to the ‘solidification’ of knowledge
  • 12.
    What I aminterested in The process of knolwedge production, rather than solidification How human epistemic agents use instruments to produce knowledge What difference this makes to our conceptualisation of knowledge 12
  • 13.
    What I need Abroad enough concept of knowledge Many ways of generating knowledge: experiments, formal modelling, close reading, theories and concepts, … Many elements of knowledge: material, vernacular, formal, … But mainly, instruments seem to do more than just Mediating between us and the world Augmenting our capacities to see the smaller or the bigger Enhancing ability to analyse more data 13
  • 14.
  • 15.
    ReDiEM Knowledge Knowledge isa product of techno-scientific activities carried out by epistemic agents, it is often expressed in propositional form in natural language, it is also encapsulated in material objects, and is situated with respect to a number of social, cultural, or material aspects Not a definition, but a broad characterisation Elements about Relation, Distribution, Embodiement, Materiality are as important as propositional content and vernacularity These elements are interrelated, rather than isolated Any element can become more prominent, depending on the specific question at hand My question, reformulated: How to cash out the partnership of human and artificial agents in the process of knowledge production? 15
  • 16.
    Poiêsis Or, how humanand artificial epistemic agents co-produce knowledge
  • 17.
    The legacy From Greekthinking: Poiêsis is about producting artefacts, it is about technê rather than epistêmê At the root of the (alleged) superiority of epistêmê over technê From contemporary Philosophy of Information Poiêsis is (also) about producing the situations moral agents are in, and that are subject to ethical assessment Useful to reduce moral luck 17
  • 18.
    The semantic spaceof the poiêsis The poietic character of human epistemic agents: The production of artefacts by human agents A topos of Greek philosophy and of philosophy of technology, not my main interest here; The production of knowledge by human epistemic agents; An expansion of Phil Information ‘homo poieticus’ as moral agent, it includes human epistemic agents as techno-scientists and as philosophers The poietic character of artificial agents The power of technical objects to interact and modify the environment Digital and analogue technologies have this power (in degrees), we learn from Simondon The partnership of human and artificial epistemic agents This partnership comes with important responsibilities, both epistemic and moral ones 18
  • 19.
    Why does itmatter? 19
  • 20.
    Knowledge production isdistributed Human and artificial epistemic agents produce knowledge An epistemic point: Knowledge production is not a prerogative of us human(s) Technologies, the environment, materiality and embodiment, situatedness … are all essential elements A normative point Distribution in the process of production of knowledge does not mean less responsibility from us human epistemic agents We still have responsibility for the knowledge we produce, the artefacts we design and develop, the policies we implement, … Epistemology and ethics must go hand in hand 20
  • 21.
    A vision forthe field 21
  • 22.
    Philosophy of Science Philosophy of Technology Scienceand Technology Studies Ethics/ Political Philosophy Philosophy of Techno-Science The intellectual and academic space where different perspectives and traditions meet and fruitfuilly dialogue about techno-science 22
  • 23.
  • 24.
    Poiêsis how human andartificial epistemic agents co-produce techno-scientific knowledge Federica Russo Philosophy & ILLC | Amsterdam russofederica.wordpress.com| @federicarusso Thank you for your attention

Editor's Notes

  • #3 Instruments in science. We tend to think of big instruments, e.g. LHD, mass spectometers, big optical telescopes … But instruments have been used since much earlier, some we still use today …
  • #7 What is exposure research How it goes beyond traditional epidemiology Technology plays a major role in this fundamental change
  • #8 Emphasise that this is important because biomarkers are not there for us to find, as cherries on a tree or strawberries in a bush Remember passage in Hacking Repr & Inter, where he also says that it would be miracoulous if sci phenomena were out there to be picked as cherries on a tree
  • #9 What it is – digital humanities > history of ideas + computational methods Research currently done in-house!
  • #11 To understand why this is problematic, one needs to understand the state of the art. But state of the art is quite different, depending on whether one looks into Phil Sci, Phil Tech, or STS
  • #16 HERE GIVE EXAMPLES OF REDIEM-K IN THE 2 CASE STUDIES