Charles Bodon is currently Ph.D. candidate in philosophy at the University of Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne under the supervision of Pr. Jocelyn Benoist, certified professor of philosophy, holder of a double master's degree in philosophy of science and contemporary philosophy from the University of Paris 1, and digital expert France 2030.
His research focuses on the new types of realism to which the digital devices of the Web subject its users, whether through virtual reality, Deepfake, or even social networks. More particularly, he works on the way that these devices modify our relationship to spatiotemporal continuity, for example when they re…
Charles Bodon is currently Ph.D. candidate in philosophy at the University of Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne under the supervision of Pr. Jocelyn Benoist, certified professor of philosophy, holder of a double master's degree in philosophy of science and contemporary philosophy from the University of Paris 1, and digital expert France 2030.
His research focuses on the new types of realism to which the digital devices of the Web subject its users, whether through virtual reality, Deepfake, or even social networks. More particularly, he works on the way that these devices modify our relationship to spatiotemporal continuity, for example when they reproduce different contexts (close or distant, real or fictional) using digital images and make them appear instantly on screens.
He is interested in the different technical and artistic processes that involve generative artificial intelligence and attempts to relate them to social uses, for example through the use of conversational agents or generative text and image models. This, ultimately, to criticize the misuse of language about these technologies and, through conceptual analysis, to think the new forms of rationality that are at work in the real-virtual couple.
For this, he approaches several axes which allow him to treat the ontology of human-machine interaction, in particular the philosophy of language and logic (in a pragmatist perspective inherited from Wittgenstein), as well as New Realism, a European philosophical movement of the 21st century which attempts to renew the question of reality through a critique of postmodernism, and Knowledge Representation and Reasoning (in particular through computer ontologies and the interdisciplinarity these technologies imply).
His articles are available on my ResearchGate and Academia pages, do not hesitate to contact him.
Thesis: "The Web of Reality: New Realism Facing the Virtuality of the Web"