|¦¦| is newton’s third law of motion visualized.
Read MoreThis interactive, audio-visual installa- tion creates three-dimensional spaces with light and haze. Tracking cameras interlink user and light by creating an ever-changing landscape of illumi- nated silhouettes, outlines, fleeting cones of light, and phantom walls.
Read MoreFarewell, Sweet Memories raises the question of how memories retain value in a time when photography, audio, and video reign.
Read MoreThe series of photographs represents the 25 “leap seconds” that have so far been added to our current time count.
Read MoreOur childhood summers seemed to stretch on forever but now slip by so fast
Read MoreHow does this “world time” relate to our conscious experience of time?
Read MoreOur childhood summers seemed to stretch on forever but now slip by so fast
Read MoreJulian Barbour will discuss these problems and talk about his latest work on gravity and the arrow of time.
Read MoreAbout time: From Einstein‘s simplest idea to the ends of spacetime
Read MoreA Melanesian perspective on time and reality
Read MoreDuring his keynote lecture, founding director Michael John Gorman will present the work and mission of his initiative Science Gallery at Trinity College Dublin, a cultural space dedicated to creative collisions between science and art.
Read MoreIf the age of mass media was about manufacturing consent, the age of social media is about manu- facturing “now.”
Read MoreThis panel will examine the similarities, differences, and intersections of art and scientific research.
Read MoreAs the earth turns on its axis, cycling through night and day, our experienced environment changes.
Read MoreConceptual artist and experimental philosopher Jonathon Keats takes research on the enteric system as a starting point for considering alternate modes of comprehension that don't directly engage our gray matter.
Read MoreHow to imagine future? And is it of any help to make progress tangible and senseable? What progress can be observed in the area of motions and artificial intelligence? And where else does one find "sentimental machines"?
Read MoreCan AI be creative? Or is creativity one of the few realms where humans cannot be replaced by machines, software and automation?
Read MoreAre emotions universal to all humans or are they dependent on the cultural environment of individuals?
Read MoreFrom animal models to magnetic resonance imaging, this panel gives an idea of how scientists attempt to understand the nature of affection.
Read MoreCurrent technologies can track our position on the planet to the mood of our co-workers in the office. Trendy "Apps" come in the shape of friendly interfaces installed in portable devices posing no harm at first sight. But what happens when such technologies are used for marketing and commercial purposes?
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