Us and artificial intelligence: Questioning agency and the need for critical and humanist perspectives

Marco Guglielmo, Petra Ahrweller, Oscar Barberà, Dario Simon Brockschmidt, Nathan Critch, Ana Luisa de Moraes Azenha, Alejandro Fernández Del Río, Crystal A. Ennis, Pedro Garcia Guijarro, Eva Gomís Jaen, Darcy Luke, Blanca Luque Capellas, Michal Malý, Masoumeh Iran Mansouri, Andrea Medrado, Ben O'Loughlin, D'arcy Ritchie, Mar Sánchez Montell, Carla Sentí Navarro, Saori ShibataHenry Snowball, Andreu Teruel, Bradley Ward

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This essay explores how Artificial Intelligence (AI) is reshaping political and social agency, arguing for the need to ground AI research in critical and humanist perspectives. While AI technologies are increasingly integrated into public infrastructures, their development is often driven by market logics that prioritise efficiency, prediction, and optimisation at the expense of democratic participation, epistemic plurality, and environmental sustainability. The essay results from a two-day international workshop held at the University of Valencia, which brought together interdisciplinary researchers to engage in experiential, reflexive, and collaborative theory-building. Using world cafés, scenario-building, and AI-assisted role-play, participants collectively identified five key challenges of AI-mediated social life: the ideological framing of efficiency, exclusions within participatory processes, the epistemological authority of AI systems, the erasure of historicity, and the instability of predictive infrastructures. In response, we propose a minimal framework to reorient AI research toward feminist, decolonial critical agendas. These include reclaiming predictive power, critically assessing participation and exclusion, and addressing the environmental and geopolitical dimensions of AI. We also reflect on the meaning of research impact in AI scholarship, advocating for a broader conception that embraces critique, friction, and reflexivity. Overall, the essay argues that reclaiming agency in the age of AI requires not only better software-design or regulations but a fundamental rethinking of the social relations, epistemologies, and political imaginaries of technological development.
Original languageEnglish
Article number318
JournalOpen Research Europe
Volume5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 16 Oct 2025

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