| Veranstaltungen | Kooperation | DIGHUM lectures: Decolonizing the Future – Computer Science Is not Just Science/Engineering Anymore As It Used to Be in the Old Days
8. April 2025
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DIGHUM lectures: Decolonizing the Future – Computer Science Is not Just Science/Engineering Anymore As It Used to Be in the Old Days

The initiative DIGHUM lectures started with regular online events to discuss the different aspects of Digital Humanism. The bidt and the TU Wien are cooperation partners for DIGHUM lecture series.


Speaker:  Hans Akkermans (Digital Humanism Visiting Professor at TU Wien and IWM Visiting Senior Fellow)

Scanning through the history of Computer Science (incl. personal experiences and anecdotes), we observe that there have been and are many different images of what Computer Science (CS) is. Once it was a “New Kid on the Block” in the STEM scientific hierarchy of the “exact” sciences (“practically very useful, but not really scientific”). Now it is hailed as the geopolitical key to a global Digital Transformation that is proclaimed to revolutionize every sector of society and economy (not to forget War and Peace). CS, however, has had major difficulty in acknowledging and coming to terms with its own social and societal nature; but with an outdated self-image it is not ready for the future. CS is becoming an instrument for major powers to colonize the digital world and from there the “real” world, in ways reminiscent of what the 19th century colonial powers did during the Industrial Revolution. The (also scientific) task at hand is then to Decolonize the Future. In line with such a reverse perspective, the talk will end, not with Q&A, but with an A&Q session.

About the Series

A roughly bi-weekly seminar offers presentations and panels from worldwide thought leaders. It is typically held on Tuesday afternoons at 17:00 CET.

The bidt and the TU Wien are cooperation partners for DIGHUM lecture series.

Digital Humanism deals with the complex relationship between man and machine. It acknowledges the potential of Informatics and IT. At the same time, it points to related apparent threats such as privacy violations, ethical concerns with AI, automation, and loss of jobs, and the ongoing monopolization on the Web.

For this reason, a new initiative — DIGHUM lectures — started with regular online events to discuss the different aspects of Digital Humanism.

We will have one or more speakers on a specific topic followed by a discussion, or panel discussions, depending on topic and speakers. The exact dates will be announced at least two weeks before.