3.9 Article

AI and social theory

Journal

AI & SOCIETY
Volume 37, Issue 4, Pages 1337-1351

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00146-021-01222-z

Keywords

Artificial intelligence; Big data; Computational social science; Micro; macro-link; Social theory

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The paper introduces a programme for AI-driven social theory and discusses the potential applications of AI in social theory. It emphasizes the capabilities of AI in knowledge integration, reasoning, and problem-solving, while also highlighting the limitations of AI in social theory, such as the lack of cumulative, holistic, and generative abilities.
In this paper, we sketch a programme for AI-driven social theory. We begin by defining what we mean by artificial intelligence (AI) in this context. We then lay out our specification for how AI-based models can draw on the growing availability of digital data to help test the validity of different social theories based on their predictive power. In doing so, we use the work of Randall Collins and his state breakdown model to exemplify that, already today, AI-based models can help synthesise knowledge from a variety of sources, reason about the world, and apply what is known across a wide range of problems in a systematic way. However, we also find that AI-driven social theory remains subject to a range of practical, technical, and epistemological limitations. Most critically, existing AI-systems lack three essential capabilities needed to advance social theory in ways that are cumulative, holistic, open-ended, and purposeful. These are (1) semanticisation, i.e., the ability to develop and operationalize verbal concepts to represent machine-manipulable knowledge; (2) transferability, i.e., the ability to transfer what has been learned in one context to another; and (3) generativity, i.e., the ability to independently create and improve on concepts and models. We argue that if the gaps identified here are addressed by further research, there is no reason why, in the future, the most advanced programme in social theory should not be led by AI-driven cumulative advances.

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