If software is narrative: Joseph Weizenbaum, artificial intelligence, and the biographies of ELIZA
Simone Natale
2134/35023
https://repository.lboro.ac.uk/articles/journal_contribution/If_software_is_narrative_Joseph_Weizenbaum_artificial_intelligence_and_the_biographies_of_ELIZA/9473567
Software is usually studied in terms of the changes triggered by its operations in the material world. Yet, to understand its social and cultural impact, one needs to examine also the different narratives that circulate about it. Software’s opacity, in fact, makes it prone to being translated
into a plurality of narratives that help people make sense of its functioning and presence. Drawing from the case of Joseph Weizenbaum’s ELIZA, widely considered the first chatbot ever created, this paper proposes a theoretical framework based on the concept of “biographies of media” to illuminate the dynamics and implications of software’s discursive life. The case of
ELIZA is particularly relevant in this regard because it became the center of competing narratives, whose trajectories transcended the actual functioning of this program and shaped key controversies about the implications of computing and AI.
2018-09-21 13:25:26
Artificial intelligence
Human-machine interaction
Software
Narrative
Media imaginary
Biographies of media
History of digital media
Natural language processing
Joseph Weizenbaum
ELIZA
Language, Communication and Culture not elsewhere classified
Studies in Human Society not elsewhere classified