New papers on Islam and AI by Boumediene Hamzi
Dr Boumediene Hamzi, a member of the The Alan Turing Institute who recently completed our postgraduate certificate programme in Islamic philosophy, has recently published the following exploring Islam and artificial intelligence:
‘Redefining Reality: An Islamic Metaphysical Critique of AI’s Data-Centric Worldview’, in Philosophies (2026) https://www.mdpi.com/2409-9287/11/1/18
He was also a co-author of the following paper:
Fatima Ali, Karim Bouzoubaa, Frank Gelli, Boumediene Hamzi & Suhair Khan, ‘Islamic Ethics and AI: An Evaluation of Existing Approaches to AI using Trusteeship Ethics’, in Philosophy & Technology, vol. 38 (2025) https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s13347-025-00922-4
‘Theistic and Non-Theistic Ontologies in Comparison: A Critical Re-Evaluation of Comparative Studies between Mullā Ṣadrā and Heidegger’
Boumediene Hamzi has spearheaded a research group focusing on Islam and artificial intelligence, which has now had 3 conferences. He and Amina Inloes, a lecture at the College, are currently working on an edited volume on Islam and artificial intelligence.