Call for Papers: Critical Theory of the Computational
This international workshop aims to use critical theories in order to explore how digital and computational systems are influencing societal changes and how these systems are also part of broader global transformations. It will take place in Berlin on 16/17 October 2025. The deadline for submissions is 30 April 30 2025.
The workshop “Critical Theory of the Computational” engages critical theories (both in the tradition of the Frankfurt School and beyond) in order to examine how computational/digital constellations are shaping (upheaving, consolidating, etc.) foundational dynamics in society, and how said computational constellations are themselves embedded in ongoing planetary transformations (such as global heating). In interrogating possible preconceptions and assumptions entrenched in critical theories—such as human exceptionalism, and universalist aspirations—, we ask how these might be rethought in light of computational and planetary transformations.
The workshop will explore how computational constellations not only introduce new actors—such as AI systems and human–machine hybrids—but also shape existing understandings of agency and its properties like autonomy and emancipation. For example, the computational may give new opportunities for critical discourse, but it may equally give rise to numerous phenomena in politics and other parts of society that give cause for concern (such as power concentration, erosion of public discourse in liberal democracy, and enormous energy consumption).
By revisiting key concepts of critical theories—such as autonomy, emancipation, and social transformation—, the workshop will explore whether they require rearticulation or replacement to address the complex interplay of human, non-human, and planetary orders. Through cross-disciplinary dialogue, we invite participants to confront the assumptions that underpin both critical theories and contemporary discourses on computation. Together, we aim to develop a critical framework capable of addressing the multilayered and entangled realities of a computationally mediated world facing transformations of planetary scale.
The following three central questions will be discussed in the workshop:
- Why Critique—and How? How do we justify a critical stance on the computational amidst planetary stress—should our critique aim for constructive engagement, or does its force lie in unsettling entrenched norms? Which biases frame our standpoint, and how might a reflexive critique, attuned to social and planetary concerns alike, help shape more just futures?
- The Grand Challenges of Computational and Planetary Transformation: How does the computational reshape and challenge our understanding of the relationship of the human, non-human, inhumane, and no-longer human, and what ethical and political implications arise from these shifts?
- Future of Liberal Democracy: As computational networks and infrastructures become ever more embedded in polycrisis and planetary-scale change, how might liberal democracy be reimagined or reconfigured to remain legitimate, inclusive, and capable of addressing the complexities of a computationally mediated world?
The conference is jointly organized by the Center for Critical Computational Studies (C3S)in Frankfurt, the Center for Responsible AI Technologies (founded by the University of Augsburg, Munich School of Philosophy and the Technical University of Munich), and the Weizenbaum Institute in Berlin.
Submissions
The workshop is open to all career levels. Deadline for submissions is April 30, 2025. We expect a short abstract (500 words) that formulates theses on the questions raised in the call. If accepted, an extended abstract (1.500 words) is expected.
Short abstracts should be submitted via Easy Chair. Please create an account for submission.
The program committee will select the submissions and invite additional contributions.
Members of the Program Committee
Sebastian Berg, Weizenbaum Institute, Berlin
Thorsten Thiel, Universität Erfurt
Christoph Burchard, Center for Critical Computational Studies, Frankfurt a. M.
Juliane Engel, Center for Critical Computational Studies, Frankfurt a. M.
Christoph Neuberger, Weizenbaum Institute, Berlin
Benjamin Rathgeber, Center for Responsible AI Technologies, Munich
Event
The workshop will take place on 16/17 October 2025 at the Weizenbaum Institute, Hardenbergstraße 32, 10623 Berlin
Contact
For questions please contact: Annegret.Kunde[at]weizenbaum-institut.de