Language, Technology, & Care

Humanity's challenge is designing how to pursue technological progress within a broader context of care, not mere "values" that are relative to imperatives of efficiency and optimization.

Language, Technology, & Care
Image generated with Dall-E with a prompt invoking austere, retrofuturistic illustrations from 1970s sci-fi paperbacks.

This Thursday, at 10am Pacific, I'm giving a public, virtual lecture on the topic of "Language, Technology, & Care."

The talk is hosted by Topos Institute, an awesome non-profit research institute in Berkeley focused on "technologies of collective sense-making." I am delighted to announce that I will be joining Topos as a visiting researcher starting next month!

Here is the abstract of my talk:

This talk explores "care" as a missing dimension in contemporary discussions on technology, using debates around LLMs and AI alignment as a case study. Our civilization’s technological prowess is largely identified with abstraction and optimization—powers that have yielded immense benefits but which have also reshaped our relationship with reality. Increasingly, our drive to abstract and optimize takes on a life of its own, leading both technologists and non-technologists alike to engage with the world primarily through questions of modeling, measurement, and control. But what we care about cannot be appropriately tended to in such an instrumental framework, for it lacks a defined ultimate goal, a why for which we model, measure, and control. Our challenge is designing how to pursue technological progress within a broader context of care, not mere "values" that are relative to imperatives of efficiency and optimization.

If you would like to be virtually present at this lecture, you can do so by clicking this Zoom link at 10am pacific, on Thursday morning, March 20, 2025. The session will last for one hour. Here is an alternate link for the talk.

I hope to see some of you there!