Cite as: Michael Levin, ‘Diverse Embodied Intelligence: Detecting and Communicating with Unconventional Beings’, lecture presented at the symposium Scales of Life: From Basal Cognition to Planetary Intelligence, ICI Berlin, 15 May 2025, video recording, mp4, 01:04:42 <https://doi.org/10.25620/e250515-0>
Lecture
15 May 2025

Diverse Embodied Intelligence

Detecting and Communicating with Unconventional Beings
By Michael Levin

Michael Levin is the Vannevar Bush Chair and Distinguished Professor of Biology at Tufts University, where he directs both the Allen Discovery Center and the Tufts Center for Regenerative and Developmental Biology. Renowned for his pioneering work at the intersection of developmental biology, synthetic biology, and cognitive science, Prof. Levin investigates how cells and tissues process information to control growth, regeneration, and form. His research explores the collective intelligence of cells, bioelectric signaling, and the emergence of cognition in both natural and synthetic organisms, with applications ranging from regenerative medicine to synthetic bioengineering. Prof. Levin is widely recognized for co-discovering xenobots—programmable living machines made from frog cells—and has published over 350 scientific papers. His work has been featured in major scientific and popular media.

Video in English

Format: mp4
Length: 01:04:42

Contents

00:00 Introduction by Ben Woodard
01:50 Talk by Michael Levin
53:20 Discussion

First published on: https://www.ici-berlin.org/events/scales-of-life/
Rights: © ICI Berlin

Part of the Symposium

Scales of Life: From Basal Cognition to Planetary Intelligence

This symposium seeks to investigate how information processing, cognition, and other forms of sensing and making sense occur at different scales, and how the ways of understanding these scales inform and deform one another across the contemporary earth and life sciences. An exploration of these issues involves thinking with the increasingly relevant notion of the ‘planetary’ as a question of climate change and empire (D. Coen), as related to Gaia theory and its recent comeback in Earth System Science, as inclusive of the technosphere and its geopolitical implications (B. Bratton), and as a framing for understanding intelligence and life as planetary-scale phenomena (A. Frank et al.). Such an endeavour also entails observing how the study of the behaviour of biological organisms creates a mid-level bias in terms of the understanding of function (agency, teleology), and how looking at life itself through the lens of basal cognition may suspend all assumptions about the necessary material substrates for purportedly high-level capacities (M. Levin). Tracing the history of these ideas and their evolution over time is also crucial to orienting our planetary futures (T. Moynihan).

Venue

ICI Berlin
(Click for further documentation)

With

Valeria Burgio
Janice Cheon
Clemens Finkelstein
Jannis Friedrich
Freya Häberlein
Christoph Holzhey
Pablo Lima
Valentina Marcheselli
Kathrin Maurer
Maxim Miroshnichenko
Francisco Javier Navarro Prieto
Georgie Newson
Carl Olsson
Penny Yiou Peng
Nina Maria Szukala
Thomas Max Turnbull
Michael Levin
Thomas Moynihan
Deborah Coen

Organized by

Maria Dębińska
Magdalena Krysztoforska
Julia Sánchez-Dorado
Ben Woodard