What Do We See ? | Yair Assulin & Prof. Tali Dekel
Yair Assulin will be speaking with Prof. Tali Dekel, who is at the forefront of generative AI research and a development partner for Google’s video generation model, Lumiere – about vision, accelerated developments in AI, and whether artificial intelligence can truly see for us. We will explore how to translate human essence into AI and what the ideal interface is between humans and machines. From these and other questions, we will try to understand how our human consciousness changes, and will change, over time.
Sponsored by the Braginsky Center for the Interface between Science and Humanities, with participation from the audience.
The discussion will be held in Hebrew
Brave New World, Aldous Huxley’s 1932 futuristic novel, presents a chilling satirical vision of a utopian future in which humans are reproduced artificially and their emotions are sterilized through drugs so they will passively serve the government. In this world, war and disease have been eradicated at the cost of individuality, art, family, and love. The novel is considered one of the most influential futuristic masterpieces of the 20th century, coining terms that have become integral to socio-political discourse.
Today, at the dawn of the third millennium, we are living in a “brave new world” filled with unimaginable advancements, but also fear and danger. A world where “space” and “time” are fundamentally different from what we once knew; a world of new human consciousness. The Weizmann Institute is one of the places where this great era is developing, both through research and action. In a series of conversations, Yair Assulin will ask pioneering researchers in some of today’s most revolutionary fields (quantum computing, artificial intelligence, and evolution) to explore the major questions emerging from the various fields of research, the enormously relevant connection between science and the humanities in this era, and the new humanity emerging before our eyes.
