Showing posts with label aai bias. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aai bias. Show all posts

Saturday, 28 February 2026

Posthuman Turn in Digital Humanities

The Posthuman Turn in Digital Humanities: Rethinking Human Agency, Knowledge, and Culture 

The purpose of this blog is to share the core insights from my recent talk, The Posthuman Turn in Digital Humanities: Rethinking Human Agency, Knowledge, and Culture at Research Scholar's Meet 4.0 organized by Sardar Patel University, Vallabh Vidyanagar. In this presentation, we navigated through three major dimensions of our evolving existence, starting with the very toolsets that are reshaping our reality, moving into the mind's hidden frameworks, and culminating in the ultimate question of our future identity.



Navigating Human Agency in the Digital Labyrinth:
To understand our current era, I initially focused on the role of human agency within a digital culture that is now heavily intersected by Artificial Intelligence. In my exploration of "Digital Humanities Literary Criticism & Theory," I argued that we must not act as modern-day Luddites—fearing that machines will destroy our traditions—but rather as critical thinkers who use technology to ask entirely new questions about human culture and history. We are faced with a choice: will we allow technology to serve as an instrument of surveillance and control, or will we consciously integrate it to empower learning and critical inquiry? By allowing generative AI to take over menial intellectual labour, we can elevate our own human agency, provided we remain vigilant against the unconscious biases and ethical dilemmas embedded in these systems. To uncover how you can reclaim your agency and navigate the algorithms boldly rewriting the future of literary studies,

2: Unlocking the Mind's Hidden Lenses:
Once we understand the digital tools at our disposal, we must turn our gaze inward to examine the psychological frameworks that govern how we interact with texts. In my segment on "Cognitive Biases and the Literary Imagination," I delve into how our own minds continuously alter the narratives we consume. A prime example of this can be found in Julian Barnes's novel The Only Story, where characters use crossword puzzles as a deceptive validation of intellect, creating a false sense of reassurance to shield themselves against the deep existential anguish and disorder of life. Our inherent mental shortcuts and biases are actively rewriting stories in real-time, functioning as psychological blind spots that dictate our literary experiences. If you are ready to discover how your own mind is secretly tricking you while you read and shaping your interpretation of reality,

3: Redefining the Human in a Technoscientific World:
Finally, the convergence of our digital reality and our cognitive frameworks brings us to a startling crossroads: the dawn of the posthuman era. In my address on "The Posthuman Condition," I unpack how the rapid advancements in cybernetics, biogenetics, and artificial intelligence are dismantling the traditional boundaries between human, machine, and artificial life. We are witnessing the disappearance of old binary oppositions and confronting complex questions regarding genetic determinism, cloning, and identity in an entirely new environment. This posthuman turn demands that we critically reassess our old metaphysical concepts and urgently redefine what it means to be a human subject in a "more-than-human" world. To uncover the startling realities of posthumanism in contemporary culture and what this paradigm shift dictates for our collective future,