Daily schedule
After registration on Sunday afternoon, we invite you to a welcome meeting in the Amersi Lecture Theatre in New Quad, where you will meet your tutors. Join us in Deer Park afterwards for our opening drinks reception, followed by dinner in Brasenose’s historic dining hall (informal dress).
Seminars take place on weekday mornings. Most afternoons are free, allowing you time to explore Oxford, enjoy a variety of optional social events (see details below), or to sit back and relax in one of the college's atmospheric quads.
Your course culminates on Friday evening with a closing drinks reception and gala farewell dinner at which Certificates of Attendance are awarded. For this special occasion smart dress is encouraged (no requirement to wear dinner suits or gowns).
Social programme
We warmly invite all Inspiring Oxford students to take part in our optional social programme, with all events provided at no additional cost. Events are likely to include:
- Croquet on the quad
- Chauffeured punting from Magdalen Bridge
- Expert-led walking tours of Oxford
- Optional visit to an Oxford Library or the Ashmolean Museum
- River Thames afternoon cruise
- Quiz night in the college bar
- Scottish country dance evening (where you do the dancing!)
Seminars
Monday
Making Machines Moral
- Can we teach or encode right and wrong to something that doesn’t feel? Is it desirable?
- Can machines be programmed to behave morally without moral understanding or a conscience?
Our week begins with the frontier question of machine morality. From self-driving cars making life-or-death choices to algorithms shaping human destiny, we’ll examine whether moral behaviour can be programmed, and what’s lost when ethics are reduced to code.
Tuesday
Work, Play, Deskilling and Prospects for Utopia
- Should we aim to replace all jobs with AI and machine automation?
- Would the redundancy of our efforts or competency in a post-work society cheapen their value or worthwhileness?
Today we explore automation’s double edge: liberation from work on one hand, and the erosion of skill, meaning, and identity on the other. Could AI lead us towards a post-work utopia, or an age where human effort no longer matters?
Wednesday
Can a machine ever truly love; or be loved?
- Should we develop social robots and/or enter into relationships with them? Why/why not?
- Can relationships with artificial entities be authentic? If no, what is stopping those relationships from being authentic?
Today we confront the ethics and emotions of human–robot relationships. From social companions to AI partners, we’ll investigate whether these connections can ever be authentic, and what they reveal about our deepest desires for recognition, intimacy, and control.
Thursday
If a machine told you that it was conscious, would you believe it?
- Can AI become conscious? If so, how would we know?
- Is biology a prerequisite of consciousness?
Today we discuss the enigma of artificial consciousness; exploring whether awareness requires biology, or if thought and feeling might someday arise from silicon. We’ll blend philosophy of mind with cutting-edge AI theory to question what consciousness truly is.
Friday
Superintelligence and AI Apocalypse
- Can the risks of power-seeking AI be mitigated, and if so, how? What are the most promising strategies?
We close with the grand and unsettling question: can humanity coexist with something vastly smarter than itself? We invite you to examine competing visions of the future, from catastrophe to coexistence, and to debate how (or whether) we can control what we create.