Amapola will take part in the Polisophia event presenting the new FrancoAngeli volume on Artificial Intelligence and responsible innovation.
On Friday, May 15, from 6:15 to 7:15 p.m., Polisophia, the Community for Responsible Innovation, will be at the Turin International Book Fair, in the Lingotto venue, Galleria Visitatori, Sala Avorio, for an event dedicated to the volume “Il pendolo dell’algoritmo. Sguardi multidisciplinari sull’Intelligenza Artificiale” (The algorithm’s pendulum. Multidisciplinary perspectives on Artificial Intelligence), published by FrancoAngeli and edited by Ruben Razzante, founder of the Community and Professor of Information Law at Università Cattolica in Milan and Lumsa University in Rome.
Amapola will also be taking part in the event, represented by Partner Sergio Vazzoler, who will join Ruben Razzante, Mario Di Giulio, Partner at Pavia e Ansaldo, and Maria Chiara Vola, Head of AI at Synergie Italia. Organised in collaboration with FrancoAngeli, the event is also part of the publishing house’s 70th anniversary programme. Admission is free and no booking is required.
A community for responsible innovation
Polisophia is a multidisciplinary platform for dialogue, bringing together businesses, institutions, professional communities, academia and civil society to explore the direction of technological development and help guide it towards the common good. The focus of the Community’s first year of work is Artificial Intelligence: a cultural, economic and social transformation that is already changing the way we work, communicate, make decisions and build relationships. Today, more than ever, we need spaces for discussion that can bring together different areas of expertise, public responsibility and a clear focus on the impact of innovation on people.
A book that looks at AI from multiple perspectives
“Il pendolo dell’algoritmo” is the first collective publication developed within Polisophia and offers a plural reading of Artificial Intelligence. Its aim is to move beyond fragmented or purely technical views of AI, and to examine its cultural, legal, economic and social implications.
This approach is especially relevant at a time when technological innovation is accelerating and calls for new forms of governance, new skills and greater collective awareness. Talking about AI means looking not only at the tools themselves, but also at the principles that guide how they are designed, adopted and regulated.
Innovation, relationships and impact
The Turin event on 15 May will therefore be an opportunity to reflect on AI starting from a key question: how can we govern technological change without losing sight of the quality of relationships, the protection of rights and the impact on people?
From this perspective, the conversation promoted by Polisophia connects closely with some of the core themes of Torino Social Impact: innovation as a collective process, responsibility as a driver of development, alliances between different actors, and the ability to generate social as well as economic value.
The Book Fair offers an ideal setting to bring the debate on Artificial Intelligence beyond purely technical circles and into a broader cultural and civic conversation. Because the future of innovation will depend not only on the tools we are able to develop, but also on the questions we are able to ask together.