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ASIS&T President's Lecture - Demons, Determinism, and Divining the Future of Information Science

Thursday, September 19, 2024 (10:00 AM - 11:30 AM) (EDT)

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Presented by R. David Lankes, Virginia and Charles Bowden Professor of Librarianship, University of Texas at Austin

A demon in science is a conceptual device used to illustrate a theory or pose a question for interrogation. For example, Laplace’s Demon was a creature that could know every action occurring across the universe in an instant and thus perfectly predict the future and divine the past. Laplace used this construct as the basis of what would come to be known as determinism-a logical, causal, clockwork universe.

Let us posit an information demon. A creature that could reach out and hold the entirety of information science in its hands. Would information science have soft or hard edges? Would the shape and inner forms be fixed or constantly moving? How big of a factor is AI in this whole? Of course, the biggest question might be why would a demon do this in the first place? What could one learn from grasping the whole of the field versus picking up components one by one?

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Thursday, September 19, 2024 (10:00 AM - 11:30 AM) (EDT)
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