Leonardo | Page 10 | Leonardo/ISAST

Leonardo

ISSN: 
1071-4391
Title: 

Leonardo, Volume 58, Issue 4

August 2025

Deadline: 
1 July 2025 to 15 September 2025
Organized by: 
Leonardo
Publication: 

Guest Editors: Ryan McGranaghan, Renee Davis, and Nick Travaglini

In a time of disorientation and raw emotion, the question of flourishing becomes even more urgent—and profoundly collective. We invite scholars, artists, scientists, philosophers, and cultural practitioners to contribute to a special Focus Section in Leonardo, dedicated to exploring flourishing as a dynamic, relational process rooted in ecology, anthropology, and shared inquiry.  In this section we ask how flourishing can be embedded into the very form and process of our work and lives (represented, felt, shared, and enacted).

 

This call emerges from years of Flourishing Salons and the first Flourishing Summit (which took place in May 2025), a gathering of diverse voices committed to reimagining well-being as participatory, systemic, and evolving–a dynamic, not a state. We seek contributions that explore how flourishing can be embedded into the very form and process of our work and lives (represented, felt, shared, and enacted).

 

These contributions will be part of creating a long-term conversation about flourishing that emphasizes dialectical engagement, ongoingness, and the pursuit of "great questions."

 

We welcome contributions in the form of:

  • Scholarly essays (up to 5,000 words)
  • Dialogues or polyvocal texts
  • Practice-based research (including visual, sonic, performative, or computational works)
  • Hybrid or experimental formats that treat language and structure as part of the inquiry

 

Key themes include:  

  • What perspectives might open new spaces in the longstanding conversation and living history of flourishing? 
  • How can artistic and scientific practices embody ongoingness and collectivity?  
  • How do we conceive of interdependence, kinship, and attention as modes of flourishing?  
  • What is the role of beautiful questions as generative methods for thinking of flourishing?   
  • How might we model dialectical approaches that illustrate flourishing as process over destination?
  • In what ways is flourishing scale-dependent? Scale invariant? 
  • How might flourishing be measured and how might existing approaches to measurement need to be altered or reimagined to accommodate the complexity of flourishing? 

 

Flourishing is not a fixed endpoint but a continuous negotiation—an active, collective effort to live well with and for each other, grounded in the moral imagination and personal change that Christiana Figueres describes as essential for systemic change. As Danielle Allen reminds us, “There is no end to history, no state of rest for democracy”—and so too, our conception of flourishing must be an ongoing, participatory process.

 

Join us in cultivating a plural, reflective movement—one that recognizes the complexity, ambiguity, and beauty of living systems in mutual becoming.

 

Proposals and Inquiries
Interested authors may submit manuscript proposals or inquiries to editor@leonardo.info.


Manuscript Submissions
For detailed instructions for manuscript and art preparation, visit Information for Journal Authors.

To submit a completed manuscript, upload to Editorial Express.

Deadline: 
26 June 2025 to 3 November 2025
Organized by: 
Leonardo
Contact: 
Clarissa Ribeiro
Publication: 

From early cybernetics to today’s AI frontiers, the entanglement of computational and biological sciences has continuously reshaped our understanding of intelligence, control, and consciousness. Leonardo invites artists, researchers, and theorists to contribute to a special issue exploring The Chimæric Mind—the merging of human cognition, artificial intelligence, and non-human life in scientific, technological, and artistic inquiry. As brain-inspired AI, connectomics, and brain-computer interfaces push the boundaries of human-AI entanglement, we are confronted with a future in which ‘Transcendent AI’ redefines selfhood, agency, and reality. This issue focus section will investigate the ethical and ontological implications of fusing artificial intelligence with biochemical and ecological systems, and the intersections of AI, spirituality, and consciousness. By blending, remixing, and reconfiguring informational structures across neurological, molecular, and quantum scales, we seek to spark critical cross-disciplinary dialogue on AI’s role in shaping planetary futures and expanding our collective imagination.

Topics of Interest include (but are not limited to):
The Syncretic Mind: Beyond Spirituality
Investigating AI’s role in transcendent experiences beyond cultural and religious constraints. Contributions may explore intersections of neuroscience, brain-inspired AI, and brain-computer interfaces in shaping artificial divinity and expanded consciousness.
Transcendent AI: On Artificial Consciousness
Interrogating AI systems that surpass human comprehension, potentially exhibiting self-awareness and creative problem-solving. Contributions may examine the theoretical and practical challenges of artificial consciousness and its implications.
Molmedia: The Quantum Biology of Mind
Exploring consciousness as an emergent phenomenon from quantum interactions beyond classical neural networks. This topic invites discussions on quantum entanglement, superposition, and their role in shaping cognition and perception.
Moist-Encounters: The Artificial Biochemical
Addressing AI’s integration with biochemical processes, from genetic chimerism to engineered life forms. This topic explores ethical and transformative aspects of AI-driven biological experimentation and its potential futures.
Artificial Ecology-as-Cosmology: Decolonial-Convolutional
Investigating AI’s impact on ecological and cosmological narratives, challenging dominant paradigms. This topic welcomes perspectives on AI’s role in reshaping planetary interconnectedness through decolonial and convolutional frameworks.
On the (A)gender(s) of the Machine
Exploring the gendered dimensions of AI, from representation to hybrid intelligence theories. Contributions may examine AI’s role in shaping, reinforcing, or challenging societal constructs of gender and identity.

Proposals and Inquiries
Interested authors may submit manuscript proposals or inquiries to Leonardo at editor@leonardo.info.

Manuscript Submissions
For detailed instructions for manuscript and art preparation, visit https://leonardo.info/author-information
Completed manuscripts can be uploaded at editorialexpress.com/leonardo
.
Guest Editors: Clarissa Ribeiro, Roy Ascott

Deadline:
November 3, 2025: Manuscript submission

leon 58.3 - LAUREN: The Human-Intelligent Smart Home That Questions Our Boundaries with Technology

Abstract
The work recently bestowed the Human AI Art Award features a human stand-in for now-ubiquitous AI assistants, prompting critical reflection on our evolving relationship with emerging technologies. As narrated by the exhibition curator, the performative installation challenges contemporary perceptions of AI, surveillance, and its integration into our daily lives.