How do you make an exhibition about something that is yet to be? Or - is it just beginning to be? The Copernicus Science Centre has taken up this challenge, and you can judge for yourself.
The exhibition The Future is Today appears in the place of the former RE:generation and, like it, will focus on themes close to young adults. Can you trust machines? Can you love a robot? How does artificial intelligence "think"? Can it be creative? * The exhibition will take a look at what is or could be in the near future and the possibilities opened up by ultra-modern reality. It will inspire us to think about the future we want to live in and how we can influence it. The exhibition will consist of around 80 exhibits that present the benefits and risks associated with the use of digital technologies, as well as possible directions of scientific development and their consequences. The whole consists of three parts, made available sequentially over two years.
The first part is *Cyber digital brain_. It will try to answer how digital technology can help us face the challenges of today? Will it not "incidentally" generate new problems? The first part of the exhibition will take visitors to the world of algorithms, robots and inventions. It will ask questions about the limits of trust, privacy, intimacy, a sense of security, comfort, and about new definitions of art and creativity. It consists of four groups of exhibits: Introduction to AI, Trust, Creativity and Relationships.