The Stories We Govern By: AI, Risk, and the Power of Imaginaries

Authors

  • Ninell Oldenburg Copenhagen University, Center for Philosophy of Artificial Intelligence
  • Gleb Papyshev Lingnan University, Department of Government and International Relations, Division of Artificial Intelligence

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aies.v8i2.36686

Abstract

This paper examines how competing sociotechnical imaginaries of artificial intelligence (AI) risk shape governance decisions and regulatory constraints. Drawing on concepts from science and technology studies, we analyse three dominant narrative groups: existential risk proponents, who emphasise catastrophic AGI scenarios; accelerationists, who portray AI as a transformative force to be unleashed; and critical AI scholars, who foreground present-day harms rooted in systemic inequality. Through an analysis of representative manifesto-style texts, we explore how these imaginaries differ across four dimensions: normative visions of the future, diagnoses of the present social order, views on science and technology, and perceived human agency in managing AI risks. Our findings reveal how these narratives embed distinct assumptions about risk and have the potential to progress into policy-making processes by narrowing the space for alternative governance approaches. We argue against speculative dogmatism and for moving beyond deterministic imaginaries toward regulatory strategies that are grounded in pragmatism.

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Published

2025-10-15

How to Cite

Oldenburg, N., & Papyshev, G. (2025). The Stories We Govern By: AI, Risk, and the Power of Imaginaries. Proceedings of the AAAI/ACM Conference on AI, Ethics, and Society, 8(2), 1939-1950. https://doi.org/10.1609/aies.v8i2.36686