From artificial to artefactual wisdom: governing territorial polyrhythmy
摘要
This article proposes a conceptual grammar for governing the heterogeneous temporalities that coexist within a territory without ever unifying. We argue that contemporary algorithmic infrastructures (adaptive traffic systems, logistics platforms, predictive analytics) share an architectural commitment they cannot govern: they operate according to a dominant logic derived from Aristotle’s excluded third, treating contradictions as problems to be resolved through eliminating one of their terms. The governance of territorial polyrhythmy requires a different architecture. Our central contribution is a grammar for qualifying territorial temporal antagonisms, not a critique of the smart city paradigm alone. Drawing on Simondon’s metastability (1958), Stengers’s ecology of practices (2005), and Lupasco’s logic of the included third (1951), we propose three conceptual displacements: from excluded to included third, from problem-solving to antagonism governance, and from measurement to evaluation. These displacements give rise to what we call ArtefactKairos: technical devices oriented toward the composition of heterogeneous temporalities rather than the compression of time. Engaging the conversation on artificial wisdom opened in this journal (Casacuberta