Journal article
The Mystics and Magic of Latent Space: Becoming the Unseen
Membrana Journal of Photography, (Vol. 5, no. 1), pp 88-93
2020
Abstract
Bridging concerns from human-computer interaction (HCI) and media studies, this essay theorizes deepfake images in terms of their phenomenological implications: the extent to which they enfold the human viewer in a world of the otherwise unseen. Drawing on comparative phenomenology of Vilém Flusser and Louis Bec, we focus on variational autoencoders (VAEs). We contend that the processes underlying deepfake image construction, as much as deepfake images themselves, evidence a parallel, prosthetic, and computational phenomenology: a study of “that which appears” to a computer, and which appears secondarily to a user-human as image. We use the example of VAEs to argue for the emergence of a second-order, received phenomenology of the augmented human as we reside in an increasingly computational world.
Keywords: deepfake, computer vision, augmented reality, computer phenomenology, magic phenomenology, machine shamanism
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Details
- Title
- The Mystics and Magic of Latent Space: Becoming the Unseen
- Creators
- John S. SebergerAubrey Slaughter
- Publication Details
- Membrana Journal of Photography, (Vol. 5, no. 1), pp 88-93
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Language
- English
- Academic Unit
- Information Science (Informatics)
- Other Identifier
- 991021861874604721