Photo Daniel Andler

Daniel Andler

Professor emeritus

Sorbonne University

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Artificial Intelligence
Education
GovTech & Public Sector

About Me

Daniel Andler is a philosopher of science and former mathematician, focusing on cognitive science and artificial intelligence. He is professor emeritus at Sorbonne Université, affiliated with the Department of Cognitive Studies which he founded at Ecole normale supérieure in Paris, and a member of the Académie des sciences morales et politiques. He recently published a book on AI: Intelligence artificielle, intelligence humaine: la double énigme. <br /><br /> Daniel Andler est un philosophe des sciences et ancien mathématicien, spécialisé dans les sciences cognitives et l’intelligence artificielle. Il est professeur émérite à Sorbonne Université, affilié au département d’études cognitives qu’il a fondé à l’École normale supérieure de Paris, et membre de l’Académie des sciences morales et politiques. Il a récemment publié un livre sur AI : Intelligence artificielle, intelligence humaine : la double énigme.

Hear My Insights

The New York Times Debate: AI Will Reveal the Best of Humanity

The motion: Moments of extreme disruption can reveal what we most want to protect. AI in particular is prompting us to question what we consider most human: our histories, cultures, values; friendship, motherhood; love, empathy, relationship to truth… And it’s forcing an inflection point in our own evolution as a species. Many would argue that in the face of AI’s exponential development and influence, and all of its unknown consequences, our humanity will be triggered into consolidating and redefining itself, to survive and preserve its legacy on earth. Others would say that it’s too late. That AI has already evolved to disregard the truth, neglect law and democracy, feed on hate sentiment and violent, tribal dynamics on social media; to design deep fakes and extreme forms of surveillance; and to rely entirely on data and information at the cost of nuanced, critical thinking. AI, after all, does not ‘reveal’ much in of itself. It’s a tool: an engine to deploy, deliver, and distract. If it’s having terrifying consequences, it’s because human beings have designed it so. As a super-intelligent being that will learn, think and create better than the smartest human in 20 years, there is no doubt that AI will soon be able to do what most of us do, but better. So we are at a crisis point: Will this moment of confrontation and existential risk reveal the best or the worst of us? Will we adapt and thrive in a new social contract with machines, or will we give into our worst instincts and add fuel to AI’s fire? About the format: In a time of increasingly polarized and siloed conversation, The New York Times strives to protect societies' relationship to nuanced, critical thinking, healthy disagreement and trustworthy debate. The New York Times debate format, inspired by the traditional Oxford-style debate, convenes speakers for and against a motion, alongside a jury for high-level commentary. Its goal - more than pronouncing a clear winner - is to shed light on the key tensions of a complex issue in a dynamic format underscoring the importance of balanced dialogue. This session is sponsored by GitHub.

L’humain est-il (vraiment) plus intelligent que la machine ?

Avec la montée en puissance de l’IA générative cette dernière année est née l’idée, dangereuse, d'une rivalité entre l'intelligence humaine et l'intelligence artificielle. Daniel Andler, philosophe et mathématicien, propose dans cette session de dépasser les discours simplistes et une opposition stérile pour explorer les forces et faiblesses de l’humain et de la machine. Comme l'IA peut-elle amplifier, de manière utile et profonde, les capacités humaines ? Et quelles sont les implications éthiques et sociétales ?