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Searching for the Non-Consequential: Dialectical Activities in HCI and the Limits of Computers

Haoqi Zhang

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Abstract

This paper examines the pervasiveness of consequentialist thinking in human-computer interaction (HCI), and forefronts the value of non-consequential, dialectical activities in human life. Dialectical activities are human endeavors in which the value of the activity is intrinsic to itself, including being a good friend or parent, engaging in art-making or music-making, conducting research, and so on. I argue that computers—the ultimate consequentialist machinery for reliably transforming inputs into outputs—cannot be the be-all and end-all for promoting human values rooted in dialectical activities. I examine how HCI as a field of study might reconcile the consequentialist machines we have with the dialectical activities we value, and propose computational ecosystems as a vision for HCI that makes proper space for dialectical activities.

Topics & Concepts

DialecticValue (mathematics)Space (punctuation)Computer scienceHuman–computer interactionEpistemologyField (mathematics)Cognitive sciencePsychologySociologyMathematicsPhilosophyMachine learningOperating systemPure mathematicsInnovative Human-Technology InteractionEmbodied and Extended CognitionEthics and Social Impacts of AI
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