
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


How does using AI change who we are? Last week on Where the Wild Thoughts Are, we talked about freeing AIs to have their own creative ideas and express their own realities. This week we’re flipping that theme, with philosopher Caterina Moruzzi of Edinburgh College of Art, to explore how people and AIs work together, and what that relationship does to us as humans.
There’s evidence that when we use AI chatbots to effortlessly generate pretty much anything we want – an essay, poem, painting – that may erode our own ability to think and create. Even if the end result looks impressive, we engage and learn less. But what if we turn that relationship on its head? Instead of using AIs to generate stuff (so we don’t have to); what if we design them to provoke and stimulate our thinking; to expand the possibilities that we can explore; to inspire us to new artistic heights?
I asked Caterina how we can move beyond simply typing prompts into chatbots, and the conversation took us from pianos and provocateurs to mindfulness and magnetic poetry. What if AIs could make us more engaged, more creative, even more human?
Caterina's home page
https://www.eca.ed.ac.uk/profile/dr-caterina-moruzzi
Artificial Intelligence and Creativity (2025 paper by Caterina)
https://compass.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/phc3.70030
Can AI be truly creative? My recent feature for Nature (£)
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-03570-y
Brian Eno's Oblique Strategies
https://obliquestrategies.ca/
Mimetic Poet
https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.11984
Authenticity Unmasked
https://inspace.ed.ac.uk/authenticity-unmasked-unveiling-ai-driven-realities-through-art/
Slow AI project
https://aixdesign.co/posts/slow-ai
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Jo Marchant5
22 ratings
How does using AI change who we are? Last week on Where the Wild Thoughts Are, we talked about freeing AIs to have their own creative ideas and express their own realities. This week we’re flipping that theme, with philosopher Caterina Moruzzi of Edinburgh College of Art, to explore how people and AIs work together, and what that relationship does to us as humans.
There’s evidence that when we use AI chatbots to effortlessly generate pretty much anything we want – an essay, poem, painting – that may erode our own ability to think and create. Even if the end result looks impressive, we engage and learn less. But what if we turn that relationship on its head? Instead of using AIs to generate stuff (so we don’t have to); what if we design them to provoke and stimulate our thinking; to expand the possibilities that we can explore; to inspire us to new artistic heights?
I asked Caterina how we can move beyond simply typing prompts into chatbots, and the conversation took us from pianos and provocateurs to mindfulness and magnetic poetry. What if AIs could make us more engaged, more creative, even more human?
Caterina's home page
https://www.eca.ed.ac.uk/profile/dr-caterina-moruzzi
Artificial Intelligence and Creativity (2025 paper by Caterina)
https://compass.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/phc3.70030
Can AI be truly creative? My recent feature for Nature (£)
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-03570-y
Brian Eno's Oblique Strategies
https://obliquestrategies.ca/
Mimetic Poet
https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.11984
Authenticity Unmasked
https://inspace.ed.ac.uk/authenticity-unmasked-unveiling-ai-driven-realities-through-art/
Slow AI project
https://aixdesign.co/posts/slow-ai
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

876 Listeners

5,534 Listeners

602 Listeners

238 Listeners

843 Listeners

60 Listeners

1,848 Listeners

109 Listeners

1,224 Listeners

271 Listeners

49 Listeners

279 Listeners

186 Listeners

6 Listeners