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The notion of a collective mind—or general intellect—has seduced thinkers from antiquity to the present. In recent decades, it has reemerged in debates around knowledge society and cognitive capitalism, framed as a vital site of political and artistic agency. Today, however, we face an unprecedented reality: a planetary infrastructure of data centers and AI models that both materialize and alienate this collective intelligence.
AI is designed to capture the very form of collective knowledge, yet its privatisation within a handful of corporate monopolies raises urgent questions: How might we imagine the dis-alienation and re-socialisation of knowledge in the wake of such enclosures? This alienation operates not only on the collective level but also at the scale of individual human experience. One of AI’s most pressing problems is its anthropomorphism—its hyperreal mimicry of human traits such as language—which can foster misplaced trust, as when teenagers turn to ChatGPT for psychotherapy.
How, then, can we intervene at every stage of this process of human alienation that is psychic, economic, and political at the same time? In his VLC Forum 2025 keynote lecture, philosopher Matteo Pasquinelli argues that a starting point may be to recognize that all knowledge is, in some sense, a form of alienation to begin with. David Bering-Porter, Assistant Professor of Culture and Media at Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts at The New School, offers a response.
This event is part of the Vera List Center Forum 2025: Matter of Intelligence.Â
Presented by Vera List Center for Art and Politics at Schools of Public Engagement.
This program will feature ASL interpretation. Wheelchair or mobility device seating is available. Please let us know if you need any accommodation when registering or by emailing vlc@newschool.edu.
Kellen Auditorium is on the ground level of 66 Fifth Avenue and has an accessible entrance via ramp on Fifth Avenue. There are ADA accessible restrooms on that floor and an all gender restroom on the 2nd floor.
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Matteo Pasquinelli is Associate Professor in Philosophy of Science at the Department of Philosophy and Cultural Heritage of Ca’ Foscari University in Venice, where he is coordinating the ERC project AIMODELS. His book The Eye of the Master: A Social History of Artificial Intelligence (Verso 2023) won the Deutscher Memorial Prize in 2024.Â
David Bering-Porter is Assistant Professor of Culture and Media at The New School. His research interests bring together digital media theory, media studies, and the intersections of race and political economy. His book, Undead Labor: Capitalist Fantasies and the Uncanny Vitality of the Zombie, is under contract with the University of Minnesota Press. His writing has appeared in journals such as Critical Inquiry, MIRAJ, Culture Machine, and the Los Angeles Review of Books.Â