Machine Fragments
Supported by The Greenwall Foundation
Perhaps the question, “Can Machines Think”? should be re-articulated as “Is the Machine different from you or I”? Why is there a perceptive gap between our tools and ourselves? Do they also not constitute consciousness and by extension the body? The cultural schisms that generate this differentiation between “man” and “machine” are also responsible for spawning voids and displacements – and the ghosts that inhabit them. It is these ghosts who constitute “Machine Fragments.” Machine Fragments are essentially sound fictions spun from the perspective of sentient machines, testing humans for machine intelligence. Not so much to expose the machinic dimension in humans (we suspected as much), but to arouse the sense that “Machine” is also a kind of gender.
TAXONOMY
Alan Turing | Artificial Intelligence | Fiction | Gender | Human-Machine | Poetry | Sound | Web Art
REQUIREMENTS
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