Ereignis Conference
artifices – 6th Ereignis Conference – sets out to examine artificial intelligence as alterity, desiring-machine, and symbolic force that reorganizes human subjectivity, labour, and planetary life. Drawing on philosophies from Levinas and Sartre to Lacan, Deleuze and Guattari, we question the natural/artificial binary and ask whether thinking machines represent radical ethical encounter or algorithmic reduction of the Other.
Key questions include:
- How does the symbolic distinction between the “natural” body and the “artificial” cyborg create new circuits of desire and lack
- How does AI and LLMs act as desiring-machines reconfiguring affects and subjectivity beyond the thermodynamics of information?
- Does AI manifest Alterity itself, or does it annul the possibility of unconditional hospitality?
The 6th interdisciplinary Ereignis conference will take place on August 8 and 9, 2026 at Hotel Nadmorski in Gdynia, Poland, with a hybrid option for those unable to attend in person. Registration will be required.
The term “ethics” can refer to morality or to an unconditional hospitality of the Other. This later view, proposed by Emmanuel Levinas, positions the ethical act as a response to the destitute call of the Other.
This year’s Ereignis conference aims to explore the relationship between ethics and aesthetics in both of these conceptions of the ethical. Key questions are:
- What is the role of art in environmental ethics and in a confrontation with unethical aspects of hyper-capitalism?
- Can art and should art propose ethical models of behaviour for the well-being of society?
- What does ethics as hospitality mean, and can art function as a site for such hospitality?
The 5th interdisciplinary Ereignis conference will take place on August 9 and 10, 2025 at Hotel Nadmorski in Gdynia, Poland, with a hybrid option for those unable to attend in person. Registration will be required.
Image: Miletus Torso, c. 480–470 BCE. Louvre Museum. © Daniel Lebée and Carine Déambrosis. Used by permission.
In his acceptance speech for the Nobel prize in literature Jon Fosse only half jokingly referred to himself as the master of silence: how else, he asked, can we bring the unsayable out in language than through “long pause, short pause, or, simply, pause.”
This year’s Ereignis conference seeks to bring the relation between speech and silence into further focus. Our key questions are:
- What kind of speech, or speech event, enables the silent to come forward?
- How can that which cannot be said be alluded or referred to in speech?
- How is the relation between speech and silence challenged by the an increasing awareness of non-human speech?
- What are the socio-political ramifications of these relations?
The 4th interdisciplinary Ereignis conference will take place on August 10 and 11, 2024 at Hotel Nadmorski in Gdynia, Poland, with a hybrid option for those unable to attend in person. Registration will be required.
Image by Holger Feulner. Used by permission.