Losing our souls to the AI machines
When a machine can become ‘artificially intelligent’, what does it mean to be human? And who do these inventions truly serve? The answer is simple and disquieting.
When a machine can become ‘artificially intelligent’, what does it mean to be human? And who do these inventions truly serve? The answer is simple and disquieting.
Fiona McFarlane tells the story of a missing colonial boy with retrospective wisdom, writes Geordie Williamson.
Chief literary critic Geordie Williamson rounds up most mind-expanding, mood-altering titles to be released for your reading pleasure over the next 12 months.
Literature by Indigenous Australians – the voice from the heart – is the true core of the Australian canon.
If two-thirds of all humans who kick the bucket were uploaded to the internet as it is currently configured, it would look a lot like the place where Angus Mooney discovers himself.
Perhaps the greatest work of 20th century Polish literature is a novel that no longer exists. Olga Togarczuk seeks to mend the holes in the fabric of history.
Chief literary critic Geordie Williamson presents new works by the best writers, both here and overseas, to add to your reading pile in the coming year.
After a year of restless distraction reset with these six excellent — but mostly unheralded — titles published this year.
How much worse have things gotten in Africa’s most populous country? It turns out there is a lower circle of hell to explore.
Elegant, urgent and angry: Geordie Williamson reviews the six titles vying for glory
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/geordie-williamson/page/2