LOGOS

LOGOS:
Securing a Human Epistemic Future
Latest

LOGOS launches Oxbridge FFLARE with Generation AI (Reuben College, University of Oxford)

Prof Ann Kristin Glenster joins international working group on AI and the human future

LOGOS joins forces with GRTL to address epistemic rights, AI sovereignty, and national security
LOGOS and Generation AI are thrilled to launch the Oxford Cambridge Forum for Flourishing, Learning & AI Research (OxBridge FFLARE) at a roundtable workshop on education policy at King’s College, Cambridge in May 2026. Uniting expertise from the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, OxBridge FFLARE brings together leading academics, industry, policymakers, and civil society to engage with solution-oriented exploration for research and policy on impacts of AI on learning, wellbeing, and human development. This collaboration will leverage learnings from research and policy interventions to understand how policy can be used as a lever to advance human flourishing in the twenty-first century.
Professor Ann Kristin Glenster joins the Center for Humane Technology’ AI and What Makes Us Human Working Group that brings together leading scholars and practitioners to define rights and protections in the age of artificial intelligence. The Working Group brings a uniquely cross-disciplinary perspective to one of the most pressing questions of our time: how to safeguard core aspects of human experience—such as cognitive capacities, relationships, identity, and meaningful work—as AI systems increasingly shape social and epistemic life. Over the course of 2026, participants will collaboratively develop foundational norms and principles designed to inform future governance, innovation, and public debate.
LOGOS is delighted to join forces with Dr Earliani Abdul Rahman and the Global Responsible Technology Lab (GRTL) at the University of Mannheim in a project exploring epistemic rights, AI sovereignty, and national security. GRTL brings together researchers, practitioners, and policy actors to advance responsible technology development grounded in justice, participation, and real-world impact.
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Mission Statement
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LOGOS’ mission is to use our research to help identify, inform and implement tangible solutions to protect epistemic rights, information integrity and data supply chains, and a reliable, independent, and secure global digital infrastructure. Our aim is to help ensure that emerging technologies benefit the advancement of human knowledge and cognitive agency.

How can we secure and maintain meaningful human cognitive agency and epistemic rights that will enable humans to access and benefit from new domains of knowledge, advancing technologies, and AI co-existence where humans remain in control?
LOGOS
Logos denotes reasoned discourse, the principles of knowledge formation, and the ordering of meaning.
For this research initiative, logos signifies a research-to-impact effort that grounds interactive technological, societal, and legal governance in the condition that makes human knowledge possible.
It brings the discipline of reasoned method to an information environment increasingly shaped by machines; aligning scholarship, policy, and industry practice toward a shared, evidence-based human epistemic order.
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