PRESENTERS
His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama
Day 1
Opening Welcome: Susan Bauer-Wu, President, Mind & Life Institute
Moderator: Roshi Joan Halifax, Upaya Institute and Zen Center
Discussant: Richard Davidson, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Discussant: John Dunne, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Interpreter: Thupten Jinpa, Compassion Institute and Board Chair, Mind & Life Institute
Presenter: Joseph Henrich, Harvard University
Presenter: Molly Crockett, Princeton University
Day 2
Opening Welcome:Amy Cohen Varela, Board Chair, Mind & Life Europe
Moderator: Martijn van Beek, Aarhus University
Discussant: John Dunne, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Interpreter: Thupten Jinpa, Compassion Institute and Board Chair, Mind & Life Institute
Presenter: Hanne De Jaegher, University of Basque Country
Presenter: Abeba Birhane, University College Dublin
SESSION TOPICS
Day 1
Joseph Henrich explores the question: What makes us human? A growing body of research shows that more than any other animal, humans are dependent on learning from others. Joe shares insights on how culture is transmitted over many generations and defines how we thrive and survive as a species. This cultural evolution has given rise to the Collective Mind. Joseph shares his research by touching on three key aspects of human nature: Norm, Interdependence, and Ethnic psychology.
Molly Crockett explores the stories we tell ourselves as humans and how research proves that our human compassion is far reaching and expansive. Does the collective story promote a shared identity and universal compassion towards everyone? Or does it divide humanity into a purified “us” and a vilified “them?” As we face the challenges of the world today, we can look to history, tradition, and storytelling to build a greater understanding for humanity, contemplative wisdom, and modern cognitive science
Day 2
Hanne De Jaegher, a philosopher who works in the Enactive tradition of Francisco Varela, speaks about how human cognition is based, at the most fundamental level, on loving and is eminently social in nature. Focusing on intersubjectivity, or the space in-between, in human interactions, she explores the tension of how we are at once the same, as His Holiness aptly reminds us, while also being very different. It is her contention that this difference—which contains the ambiguity and complexity of human experience—can in fact be generative, provided that we take an ethical approach to human relationship.
Abeba Birhane, a specialist in the ethics of artificial intelligence, walks us through some of her latest research on the ethical and social considerations behind artificial intelligence (AI) as it is used the world over. Because human experience is fundamentally complex, ambiguous, and indeterminable, AI very often fails to accurately capture and predict human behavior. What is more, because of its attempts to generalize, we are learning that AI negatively affects marginalized people and communities to a disproportionate degree. Her talk illustrates this with a myriad of recent examples and challenge us to develop a healthy skepticism with regard to the widespread use of AI, all in hopes of creating a more just foundation for its future use.
His Holiness the Dalai Lama joins in the two day Mind & LIfe Conversation on Interdependence, Ethics, and Social Networks at his residence in Dharamsala, HP, India on October 12-13, 2022 organized by the Mind & Life Institute.
Venue: His Holiness's Residence, Dharamsala, HP, India
Date:
October 12 - 13, 2022
Duration: 2 sessions each approximately 2 hours
Languages: English