Talk:
Is Absolutely General Quantification Possible?
The possibility of absolutely general quantification is often taken to be obvious, since even its critics appear to presuppose it. This paper critically examines and rejects standard arguments for that assumption. It then develops an alternative approach that acknowledges the inherent restrictions of every form of quantification. Second-order quantification is used as a case study to illustrate these restrictions and to contrast the resulting view with Hellman’s position.
Talk:
Lunch Talk with Laurie Paul
Drawing on philosophical epistemology, the lecture introduces a conceptual framework for knowledge in animals and machines. Guest speaker Prof. Laurie Paul (Yale) uses it to develop a new notion of LLM knowledge and to propose a taxonomy spanning biological and artificial systems—from C. elegans to LLMs. This approach clarifies how knowledge is realized across these different domains while accounting for their distinct biological and physical foundations.
Workshop
Developing LLMs for Low-Resource Languages
09-13 March 2026 @ IMPULSE-Haus
This Polyglot Workshop is a four-day, hands-on program focused on sharing expertise in building large language models (LLMs), with a special emphasis on underrepresented languages. Our goal is to empower a new generation of practitioners to advance LLM development beyond high-resource settings. The Workshop covers all key stages of an LLM training pipeline, making this knowledge accessible to a broad and diverse audience.
Talk (German)
"AI Explained": AI and ethical concerns
AI in search engines, on the phone, or in the defense industry – headlines about new developments seem to outdo each other every day. While the EU has adopted its AI Act, new technological possibilities are already emerging.
How can we use AI ethically and integrate our values into its design? The lecture explores ethical concerns and risks for individuals and democratic societies, while highlighting ways we can promote responsible technology development and use.
Seminar Series:
Cross-Cultural Approaches to Desirable AI, 2nd Edition
Following the success and strong interest in last year’s events, the online seminar series “Cross-Cultural Approaches to Desirable AI” continues this year, starting on October 22. The series aims to encourage intercultural and interdisciplinary discussion on the ethics of artificial intelligence (AI). Its primhttps://www.cst.uni-bonn.de/en/events/events-1/edit?_authenticator=b126c4a555b4087b7797604c18ad1632ef58074e#ary focus is to support and develop research on AI and social justice, particularly from intersectional feminist and anti-racist perspectives. “Cross-Cultural Approaches to Desirable AI” is a collaboration between the Universities of Cambridge, Bonn, and Tokyo, and the University of Europe for Applied Sciences.