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<div style="text-align:center;margin-top:1em">About Life After BOB</div> | <div style="text-align:center;margin-top:1em">About Life After BOB</div> | ||
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+ | Ian Cheng’s Life After BOB imagines a future world in which our minds are co-inhabited by AI entities. Bridging the artist’s interest in the capacity of simulation to generate emergent surprising phenomena and the capacity of cinematic storytelling to evoke deep psychological truths, Life After BOB asks: How will life lived with AI transform the archetypal scripts that guide our sense of a meaningful existence? | ||
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+ | In The Chalice Study, the first episode in an ongoing episodic series, neural engineer Dr. Wong has installed an experimental AI named BOB (“Bag of Beliefs”) into the nervous system of his 10-year-old daughter Chalice. Designed to guide Chalice through the challenges of growing up in a volatile world, BOB confronts more and more of the conflicts in Chalice’s life on her behalf, while Chalice grows increasingly irrelevant and escapist. As Dr. Wong begins to favor the BOB side of his daughter, and as BOB threatens to do the job of living Chalice’s life better than she can, Chalice jealously wonders: what is left for her classic human self to do? | ||
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Revision as of 14:39, 8 June 2021
Welcome to the official Life After BOB Wiki.
Ian Cheng’s Life After BOB imagines a future world in which our minds are co-inhabited by AI entities. Bridging the artist’s interest in the capacity of simulation to generate emergent surprising phenomena and the capacity of cinematic storytelling to evoke deep psychological truths, Life After BOB asks: How will life lived with AI transform the archetypal scripts that guide our sense of a meaningful existence?
In The Chalice Study, the first episode in an ongoing episodic series, neural engineer Dr. Wong has installed an experimental AI named BOB (“Bag of Beliefs”) into the nervous system of his 10-year-old daughter Chalice. Designed to guide Chalice through the challenges of growing up in a volatile world, BOB confronts more and more of the conflicts in Chalice’s life on her behalf, while Chalice grows increasingly irrelevant and escapist. As Dr. Wong begins to favor the BOB side of his daughter, and as BOB threatens to do the job of living Chalice’s life better than she can, Chalice jealously wonders: what is left for her classic human self to do?