Assembling Intelligence: Transitioning from a Politics of Control to a Politics of Configuration

Author(s)

  • Dario Amenophi Perfigli TU Delft
  • Bas de Boer University of Twente

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54195/technophany.19783

Keywords:

Intelligence, Assemblage Theory, Politics of control, Politics of configuration, Human-in-the-loop

Abstract

The concept of intelligence is deeply ambiguous and entangled with historical narratives of colonialism and eugenics. The contemporary understanding of intelligence still reflects such narratives: it is understood in human-centric terms, as a property defined by goal-oriented cognitive capacities. This leads to what we term a politics of control, which relies on historically established patterns of exclusion to establish political structures with colonial connotations. In response, this paper proposes an alternative framework called the Assemblage Theory of Intelligence (ATOI). ATOI understands intelligence in terms of the dynamic relationships and activities within an assemblage and moves us from a politics of control to a politics of configuration. We illustrate ATOI through a discussion of the human-in-the-loop (HITL) methodology in AI development. Contrary to the dominant narrative, where humans are seen as controlling the loop, we reconceive HITL as an assemblage where human and machine elements configure and mutually shape each other.

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Author Biographies

  • Dario Amenophi Perfigli, TU Delft

    Dario A. Perfigli is a PhD Candidate at TU Delft in the Ethics and Philosophy of Technology (EPT) section.

  • Bas de Boer , University of Twente

    Bas de Boer (PhD) is an assistant professor in the philosophy of technology at the University of Twente. His research focuses on how technologies shape our understanding and experience of ourselves and the world we live in, with a specific focus on technologies in healthcare. His further research interests are in philosophy of science, philosophy of medicine, and (post)phenomenology of technology. He is the author of How Scientific Instruments Speak (2021, Lexington) and editor of the recent volume Phenomenology and the Philosophy of Technology (2024, OpenBook Publishers).

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Published

2026-01-30

Issue

Section

General Articles

How to Cite

Perfigli, Dario Amenophi, and Bas de Boer. 2026. “Assembling Intelligence: Transitioning from a Politics of Control to a Politics of Configuration”. Technophany, A Journal for Philosophy and Technology 4 (1): 1-27. https://doi.org/10.54195/technophany.19783.

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