Volume 2025
With Volume 2025 Antikythera launches its journal published by MIT Press. This interdisciplinary platform establishes a new framework for the philosophy of computation, evolution and intelligence and features unique collaborations between writers and designers. This inaugural volume explores the scope of planetary computation: the evolution of intelligence, global dynamics of simulation, existential technologies, diverse expressions of modular cognition, natural history of automation, informational theories of life, challenges of inhuman thought, emergence of physical AI and the deep history of planetary sapience. The second part of Volume 2025 launches in the Fall.
What Is Intelligence?
by Blaise Agüera y Arcaswith Practise, MK & MO
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZB
02.14.2025
The History of Now
by Thomas Moynihanwith Informationart & Clinton Van Arnam
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZS
05.10.2025
The Transition from the Biosphere to the Noösphere
by Vladimir Vernadskywith GIGA
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZD
05.10.2025
Speculative Philosophy of Planetary Computation
by Benjamin BrattonDOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZE
05.10.2025
Books
Antikythera’s book series with MIT Press publishes unique titles that draw upon the interdisciplinary range of our initiative, connecting Philosophy, Computer Science, Biology, History of Science and Technology, Speculative Design and Science-Fiction Literature. The book series and Antikythera journal combine to form a publishing platform for a new school of thought.
What Is Life?
by Blaise Agüera y Arcaswith Practise
What life is, and how its essence can be understood as computation that grows more complex over time in symbiotic relationships.
Accept All Cookies
by Benjamin BrattonA collection of key concepts in the philosophy of planetary computation, evolution and intelligence, published with Berggruen Press.
What Is Intelligence?
by Blaise Agüera y Arcaswith Practise
What intelligence really is, and how AI’s emergence is a natural consequence of evolution.
Index
After Alignment
by Benjamin BrattonDOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZY
What does it mean to ask machine intelligence to “align” to human wishes and self-image? Is this a useful tactic for design, or a dubious metaphysics that obfuscates how intelligence as a whole might evolve?
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZY05.10.2025
Antikythera
by Benjamin Brattonwith Channel Studio
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZ9
A new philosophy of computation that links an evolutionary perspective on technology, and the emergence of planetary computation in particular, with a generative program for how to orient it as it parents us.
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZ905.10.2025
AUTO–
by Stephanie Shermanwith Accept & Proceed
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZA
AUTO– reveals and investigates the linguistic, philosophical, and systemic paradox that the prefix auto presents, instantiated by the history and legacy of automotive history, and manifested in platform automation.
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZA05.10.2025
Existential Technologies
by Bogna Koniorwith Noviki Studio
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZV
Conceptualization of existential technologies—technologies that alter evolutionary trajectories over long spans of time, operating beyond conventional epistemic and moral frameworks—through a close reading of Stanisław Lem’s Summa Technologiae.
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZV05.10.2025
For a General Theory of Simulations
by Benjamin BrattonDOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZZ
In this talk, Benjamin Bratton proposes a general theory of simulation, exploring its roles in science, politics, identity, and cognition. Simulations shape perception, action, and reality itself through recursion, reflexivity, and technological mediation.
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZZ05.10.2025
How to Think Unlike Humans?
by Chen Qiufanwith Connor Cook
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZW
Chen Qiufan provocatively interrogates the anthropocentric biases constraining human cognition, advocating for a radical epistemological recalibration through speculative fiction.
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZW05.10.2025
Infinity Mirror
by Philip Maughanwith Son La Pham & Joel Fear
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZU
An account of how simulation technologies emerged from the interplay between military strategy, video game development, GPUs, artificial intelligence, medical modeling, and Earth System Science.
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZU05.10.2025
Modes of Cognition
by N. Katherine Hayleswith Knoth & Renner
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZF
Cognition spans conscious, implicit, and nonconscious modes. LLMs, despite lacking bodies, fulfill modified cognitive criteria—sensing, interpreting, responding, anticipating, learning—suggesting AI is part of life’s evolving cognitive lineage.
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZF05.10.2025
Planetary Sapience & Planetary Stupidity: a Bildungsroman for the Baby Noosphere
by Thomas MoynihanDOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZT
In this talk, Thomas Moynihan explores Earth’s emergence into self-awareness through human intelligence, tracing the intertwined histories of scientific insight, planetary transformation, and technological folly as preludes to potential planetary sapience.
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZT05.10.2025
Recursive Worlds
by Sara Imari Walkerwith Neo-Metabolism
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZX
This talk proposes life as an informational process that recursively constructs reality across time. Assembly theory reveals how intelligence shapes matter, making Earth the universe’s most temporally vast object.
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZX05.10.2025
Speculative Philosophy of Planetary Computation
by Benjamin BrattonDOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZE
As computation becomes planetary infrastructure, how does its acceleration of hybrid intelligences pose new challenges to fundamental philosophical questions? As it becomes planetary infrastructure, it's more than a tool—it's an epistemological technology.
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZE05.10.2025
The History of Now
by Thomas Moynihanwith Informationart & Clinton Van Arnam
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZS
The History of Now narrates humanity’s evolving sense of temporality, from medieval prophecies to cosmic theory, accompanied by a data-rich graph mapping our existential bearings over history.
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZS05.10.2025
The Transition from the Biosphere to the Noösphere
by Vladimir Vernadskywith GIGA
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZD
In a new design for this classical essay, Vernadsky introduces the noösphere: a new planetary layer emerging from the combined cognitive agency of humans and the technical infrastructures they build.
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZD05.10.2025
What Is Intelligence?
by Blaise Agüera y Arcaswith Practise, MK & MO
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZB
This article explores how AI’s emergence is a natural consequence of evolution and in this suggests a new theory of intelligence as such. Computation is fundamental to life and drives evolution.
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZB02.14.2025
57 Ideas & Questions about Cognitive Infrastructures
by Benjamin BrattonDOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZH
Benjamin Bratton shows how as AI becomes both more general and more foundational, it shouldn’t be seen as a disembodied virtual brain. It is a real, material force. AI is embedded into the active, decision-making processes of real world systems. As AI becomes infrastructural, infrastructures become not only intelligent but cognitive.
DOI 10.1162/ANTI.5CZH
Accept All Cookies
by Benjamin BrattonA collection of key concepts in the philosophy of planetary computation, evolution and intelligence, published with Berggruen Press.
What Is Life?
by Blaise Agüera y Arcaswith Practise
What life is, and how its essence can be understood as computation that grows more complex over time in symbiotic relationships.
What Is Intelligence?
by Blaise Agüera y Arcaswith Practise
What intelligence really is, and how AI’s emergence is a natural consequence of evolution.
Glossary
New things outrun the nouns available to contain them. At present many discourses attempt to apply old terms to new realities without success. This glossary assembles key terms from across the emerging Antikythera school of thought. Each is drawn from at least one of our articles, books, lectures or studio projects. This growing collection of terms is the basis of a new theoretical language that may help to orient more nuanced directions for development.
Computation
A physical system “computes” if we can form a fixed “representation relation” mapping its states (up to some level of reliability) to those of a “Turing Machine,” such that the physical evolution of the system over time parallels the abstract evolution of the Turing Machine. Alan Turing defined computation in prosaic terms: it was any sequence of steps that could be carried out by a human computer following unambiguous rules to read, write, and erase symbols, given an unlimited ream of paper and a pencil with an eraser. This abstract construct—the idealized, tireless human worker with paper and a pencil—is a Turing Machine and the symbols written on the tape comprise “algorithmic information,” or “differences that make a difference.” Universal computation is achieved when the rules allow any other set of rules to themselves be written down as symbols and interpreted by the machine, such that the computation performed is given by those written-out rules, which we call a “program” or “algorithm.” If a physical system can be mapped to a Universal Turing Machine, then the computation is universal or “Turing-complete,” no matter what the physical system is made of or how it works; this property is known as “platform independence” or “multiple realizability.” There has also been recent theoretical work to extend Turing’s original, fully deterministic form of computation to the more realistic regime of “stochastic computation,” which exhibits some degree of randomness.
HAIID
Human-AI Interaction Design (HAIID) is the wider field of interaction design specific to human-AI interaction, and distinct from HCI or Human-Computer Interaction. HAIID includes chat based interactions, from Eliza to contemporary chatbots, but also agent design, multimodal interface design, and increasingly human–AI driven robotics interaction, and more. If HCI-driven graphical user interfaces came to be based largely on visual icons and the simulation of manipulable spatial metaphors (inside, next to, on top of, bordered by, etc.) HAIID to date is driven instead by the simulation of manipulable socio-cultural cues and the implication of mutual theory of mind (mirroring, interpreting intention, semantic precision, cooperative goal-seeking, etc.) Because of this, HAIID contends with the power and problem of anthropomorphization instead of skeuomorphism; the natural reference cues are not everyday objects but everyday conversation. The scope of possible HAIID technologies is largely yet to be designed as the primary and necessary affordances and presentation of affordances of multimodal and reasoning models (and what succeeds them) remains unclear. For this reason, what may appear to be fringe socio-cultural dynamics between humans and AI may demand further research as novel directions for future HAIID design.
Hemispherical Stacks
During the early decades of the 21st century, the infrastructures of governance split more decisively from the symbolic economy of politics. The Stack model of functionally defined hardware/ software layers comprising a modular discontiguous megastructure became a standard infrastructural format for the ongoing irregular design of planetary computation. The actuation of governance became increasingly infused in computational systems of information production, modeling and recursion. Accordingly, the simultaneous shift toward multipolar planetary computation and a more multipolar geopolitics not only track one another—they are the same phenomenon in different guises. The splitting of “Stacks” is sometimes delineated by State boundaries (India Stack, for example) but is usually transnational, continental, or even drawn across oceans by existing technological and political alliances (Oceania and the US Stack, for example). These hemispheres are the scale and domain of hemispherical stacks, wherein “sovereignty” is defined by the semi-exclusive rights to produce data about social, economic, ecological and cultural flows within these ambiguously overlapping and partially interconnected geotechnical domains.
Intelligence
Intelligence is the ability to model yourself, your environment, and other intelligences; it allows you to predict how your world will be affected by you and appear to you, and how you and others will act or react, allowing you to exercise agency in your actions. Modeling involves computation. Life forms are inherently computational, and computation requires free energy. Thus it is generally necessary for life to take action to some degree (hence, be intelligent to some degree) in order to obtain free energy in a dynamic environment. There is strong evolutionary pressure on the development of intelligence among life forms whose survival is affected by interaction with other intelligences, which can lead to increasing dynamism and “intelligence explosions.” These are feedback loops in which intelligence begets more intelligence, due both to cooperative and adversarial interactions. Since parallelism increases computational capability, intelligence, like life itself, tends to be multiscale, with smaller intelligences symbiotically composing themselves into larger intelligences.
Life
Life is a complex system that perpetuates itself through time by building itself. Growth, reproduction, maintenance, and healing are all manifestations of this self-construction. Because life is complex (unlike, say, a crystal), self-construction requires a “universal constructor” that can follow directions for self-assembly, which John von Neumann showed to be equivalent to a Universal Turing Machine executing a program. Von Neumann added the proviso that the “tape” on which the program is encoded must itself be copyable, and that the tape must include directions for assembling both whatever does this copying and the universal constructor itself. (In our case, DNA, DNA polymerase, and ribosomes serve these key functions, though none of this was known at the time von Neumann developed his insight.) Life is naturally multiscale—composed of smaller life forms, and composing itself into bigger life forms—because it is at heart computational, and computations can likewise be composed. Thus, if sub-entities contain instructions for building themselves, and enter into a stable symbiosis, then the resulting larger entity also contains instructions for building itself. Because symbioses can only emerge among existing entities, evolution progresses over time from simpler life forms to more complex, composite life forms.
Planetary Computation
Planetary computation is defined not in terms of information processing but as the aggregate artificial information sensing and processing systems spread discontiguously but in regular networked patterns on, above, and below the Earth’s surface. Planetary computation begins in earnest with the first wide-scale computer networks in the last half of the 20th century, all of which were prefigured by earlier geographic-scale information networks dating at least to the beginning of the industrial era, if not earlier (depending on the scope of operant definition of computation). The emergence of computational technologies that (1) operate at a global scale through the irregular integration of technologies of information producing, transmission, calculation, manipulation, display and / or storage into composite discontinuous assemblages, that (2) allow for computational media to affect planetary systems at the scale of their operations, and / or (3) forms of computational infrastructure capable of relieving fundamental scientific realities about the synchronic and diachronic systemic qualities of Earth’s evolution, condition and future. These three modalities of planetary computation—infrastructural, technological, and epistemic—are often mutually dependent, with the pursuit of once resulting in the accomplishment of another. The architecture of planetary computation.
Planetary Computation Unit
At any given moment there is a finite amount of available possible computational capacity within the existing aggregate total artificial computational technologies. As of 2025, we estimate this to be roughly 1 zettaFLOPS or 1021 floating point operations per second. For purposes of comparison, 1 zettaFLOPS then equals 1 Planetary Computation Unit (PCU). While the total amount is by definition an abstraction and all but impossible to measure precisely, confident estimates are possible. The single largest category of contributors to this total are the billions of smart phones. Large supercomputers are a small fraction of the whole. It is estimated that over the past several years the total aggregate planetary computation has doubled roughly every 30 months. If this trend were to hold, then in a little over 16 years, there would be 100 times the present compute capacity.
Platform Automation
Platform automation is a type of system that refers both to the automation of platforms—the encoding and prescription of biogeochemical, metaphysical, or technical processes—and the platformation of automation, which describes how automation further embeds standardization and amplification of founding conditions into ecosystems and environments. No platforms without automation, no automation without ongoing platform formation. Platform automation evolves via the configurations and cascades of effects of automated processes embedding, encoding, inscribing, and artificially transforming environments in their image through feedback on performance.
Scaffolding
Complexity begets complexity by building upon itself. Scaffolding refers to the process by which forms that persist do so by becoming components in yet more complex forms. The resulting assemblages, while new, are also those most “deep in time” according to Assembly Theory in that they contain elemental forms aggregated into novel complex structures. Scaffolding also plays an important role in John Maynard-Smith and Eörs Szathmáry’s theory of evolutionary biology punctuated by “major evolutionary transitions” in which identifiable decisive consolidations of previously distinct entities, differentiation into specialized parts, and increases in energy and information transmitting-processing capacities. A similar principle holds for Brian Arthur’s historical-economic analyses of technological evolution for which new technologies are consolidations of older elements, and may play in a part in what Gilbert Simondon’s terms concretization by which successive iterations of an artifact “condense” multiple formerly separate structures or functions into a single, more integrated whole.
Synthetic Intelligence
While the term “artificial intelligence” is not incorrect given Antikythera’s more strict definition of artificialization, synthetic intelligence includes additional useful connotations: (1) the synthesis of multiple forms of intelligence acting in temporary concert, (2) the synthetic subtracts the negative connotation of “fake” associated with Aristotle's usage of “artifice”, and (3) an open association with Kant’s notion of “synthetic judgment” for which a concept is combined with another to characterize something important about each. What is recognized as AI may be in itself a form of synthetic intelligence, satisfying all three connotations above and, perhaps more importantly, the interaction between human and machine intelligence can constitute a hybridized form of cognition that may possess capabilities beyond the mere combination of the two.
About
Antikythera: Journal for the Philosophy of Planetary Computation is a peer-reviewed journal published in parallel with the Antikythera book series by MIT Press. Both are dedicated to developing a new interdisciplinary school of thought with which to engage the deepest philosophical and scientific complexities of our time, namely the conjunction and co-evolution of computational technologies, biological and non-biological life and the many scales of intelligence that are manifest in both.
The form and content of the journal are designed to approach these questions in new ways, beginning with digital media and branching out. The journal pairs designers and writers working across Philosophy, Computer Science, Biology, History of Science and Technology, Speculative Design and Science-Fiction Literature. The project recognizes that the mission of academic research and publishing is changing quickly and that new platforms are needed.
This is also an opportunity to repair rifts between Science and the Humanities at a time when the epistemological and existential challenges of one require the other. For Antikythera, the Philosophy of the 21st century will emerge from direct engagement with scientific and technological questions, and vice versa.
Antikythera seeks to make these engagements accessible, creative, rigorous and actionable. The works we publish are building blocks for further development. They are scaffolds. They are “training data” in the best sense of the term. Upcoming volumes will be announced soon.
Contributors
Berggruen Institute
Chairman & Founder
Nicolas Berggruen
Co-Founder
Nathan Gardels
Executive VP
Dawn Nakagawa
Senior VP Programs
Nils Gilman
Chief of Staff
Emily Knapp
VP BI China Center
Bing Song
Director BI Europe
Lorenzo Marsili
Antikythera Journal
Editor-in-Chief
Benjamin Bratton
Associate Editor
Stephanie Sherman
Design Editor
Nicolay Boyadjiev
Production Director
Haley Albert
Managing Editor
Dasha Silkina
Executive Assistant
Tatiana Velazquez
Research Manager
Rachel Pearl
Researcher
Lukáš Likavčan
Design Technologist
Andrey Karabanov
MIT Press
Director
Amy Brand
Acquisitions Editor
Noah Springer
Director of Journals and Open Access
Nick Lindsay
Editorial Board
Blaise Agüera Y Arcas
Holly Jean Buck
Nicholas de Monchaux
N. Katherine Hayles
Chen Qiufan
Sara Imari Walker
Authors
Blaise Agüera y Arcas
Gašper Beguš
Nina Beguš
Benjamin Bratton
Leroy Cronin
Nicholas de Monchaux
Peter Galison
N. Katherine Hayles
Bogna Konior
Lukáš Likavčan
Philip Maughan
Metahaven
Thomas Moynihan
Stephanie Sherman
Alan Turing
Vladimir Vernadsky
Risa Wechsler
Sara Imari Walker
Designers
Accept & Proceed
Catalogtree
Channel
Clinton van Arnam
Connor Cook
ENDS
Eric Hu
GIGA
Informationart
Marie Otsuka
Minkyoung Kim
Neo-Metabolism
Noviki
Practise
Son La Pham
Stewart Smith
Robert G. Pietrusko
Hemispherical Stacks Scenario Contributors
Nils Gilman
Iris Long
Christina Lu
Taiyo Fujii
Chor Pharn Lee
Dalena T Tran
Jacob Dreyer
Kola Heyward-Rotimi
Anna Greenspan
Xu Yingjin
Suhail Malik
Lukáš Likavčan
Roman Shemakov
Mi You
Alex Quicho
2024 Cognitive Infrastructures Studio Researchers
Alasdair Milne
Cezar Mocan
Chloe Loewith
Daniele Cavalli
Gary Zhang
Iulia Ionescu
Ivar Frisch
Jackie Kay
Jenn Leung
Michelle Chang
Philip Moreira Tomei
Sonia Bernaciak
Tyler Farghly
Winnie Street
Yannis Siglidis
Antikythera is a research program focused on the reorientation of planetary computation as a philosophical, technological, and geopolitical force. Antikythera takes its name from the first known computerーthe antikythera mechanismーwhich was also an astronomical instrument used for navigation, prediction, and planning. The name serves as inspiration for investigations of computational technologies that reveal and accelerate planetary intelligence.
Antikythera was founded in 2022 and is directed by philosopher of technology Benjamin Bratton. Antikythera is based at the Berggruen Institute, a 501(c)3 non-profit organization with offices in Los Angeles, Beijing, and Venice.