Santa Fe
Institute
  • Research
    • Themes
    • Projects
    • SFI Press
    • Researchers
    • Publications
    • Library
    • Sponsored Research
    • Fellowships
    • Miller Scholarships
  • News + Events
    • News
    • Newsletters
    • Podcasts
    • SFI in the Media
    • Media Center
    • Events
    • Community
    • Journalism Fellowship
  • Education
    • Programs
    • Projects
    • Alumni
    • Complexity Explorer
    • Education FAQ
    • Postdoctoral Research
    • Education Supporters
  • People
    • Researchers
    • Fractal Faculty
    • Staff
    • Miller Scholars
    • Trustees
    • Governance
    • Resident Artists
    • Research Supporters
  • Applied Complexity
    • Office
    • Applied Projects
    • ACtioN
    • Applied Fellows
    • Studios
    • Applied Events
    • Login
  • Give
    • Give Now
    • Ways to Give
    • Contact
  • About
    • About SFI
    • Engage
    • Complex Systems
    • FAQ
    • Campuses
    • Jobs
    • Contact
    • Library
    • Employee Portal

Science for a Complex World

Events

Here's what's happening

Give

You make SFI possible

Subscribe

Sign up for research news

Connect

Follow us on social media

© 2026 Santa Fe Institute. All rights reserved. This site is supported by the Miller Omega Program.

Home / News

SFI launches Synthetic Imagination series

image: "Exterior of Newton's Cenotaph." Unrealized design proposal by Étienne-Louis Boullée. 1784. Courtesy of the Library of Congress.
December 22, 2025

Written by SFI Research Fellow Anthony Eagan

Since the origins of modern philosophy and poetry, imagination has been a technical term for the human ability to cognize in images and thought combinations that reconfigure our memories or immediate experience. Gaston Bachelard puts this well in his book Air and Dreams when he writes, “We always think of the imagination as the faculty that forms images. On the contrary, it deforms what we perceive; it is, above all, the faculty that frees us from immediate images and changes them.” The imagination, then, allows us to conceive of new ideas, concepts, shapes, formulae, and compositions (rather than merely navigating what we perceive empirically).

It was with this in mind, along with the idea that the imagination may be the faculty that most distinguishes us from so-called alien intelligences (AI included), that SFI Director of Experimental Projects Caitlin McShea and I conceived of and hosted Synthetic Imagination, a small multi-day symposia series, in SFI’s new Gurley Forum this past September. Given our belief that the imagination spans all human practices and provides the means for growth and innovation, we invited a variety of professionals who implement the imagination to wonderful effect.

The range of possible contributors being so vast, we limited the inquiry to architecture, urban design, and other “species of spaces” that both result from and foster the imagination, with the aim of making the event the first in an ongoing series devoted to investigating how the imagination operates. Just what is imagination, and how is it relevant to our particular endeavors — in this case the art and technique of building?

We inaugurated the series with architecture because well-designed human structures present a rich, inhabitable synthesis between the creative and constructive faculties. Each structure tends to replicate its mental origin and endow it with greater permanence and plastic possibility, and, in this sense, the poetics of space and the space of poetics may illuminate one another.

Opening with a screening of Nest (Hlynur Pálmason, 2022) — a short film about three siblings who slowly build, modify, and play in a treehouse — we continued with a presentation by book-architect and artist Keri Schroeder and my own talk about bridges. Ensuing days included contributions by urban designer Jorge Almazan (“Design Fieldwork in Architecture”), photographer Kate Joyce (“Photography as Theft of the Imagination”), winemaker Abe Schoener (“Roles of the Imagination in Thinking about Vineyards”), novelist and SFI Miller Scholar Tom McCarthy (“The Threshold and the Ledger”), and SFI President David Krakauer (“Secret Histories of the Nomological Imagination”). The private event concluded with cocktails and a book fair.

McShea was excited to activate newly imagined, now actualized spaces across the Miller Campus in novel experimental ways, using Gurley Forum as a theater and establishing an art gallery featuring Kate Joyce’s photography. As she put it, “Miller Campus embodied the actual subject matter of Synthetic Imagination.”

Synthetic Imagination is supported by The Miller Omega Fund.





Share
  • Sign Up For SFI News
News Media Contact

Santa Fe Institute

Office of Communications
news@santafe.edu
505-984-8800



  • Tags
  • SFI News Release


More SFI News

View All News

Looking at AGI through the lens of natural intelligence

A simple baseline for AI forecasting in machine learning

Constantino Tsallis to co-chair the 2027 Nobel Symposium on Statistical Mechanics

How novelty arrives: Review of “The Origins of the New”

Working group asks, what’s the benefit of a brain?

Measuring irreversibility in gene transcription

ACtioN Academy engages industry leaders on AI and complexity

Arguing for a complex adaptive power grid

Mark Newman Awarded 2026 SIAM John von Neumann Prize

Review: Nonesuch, by SFI Miller Scholar Francis Spufford

Laurent Hébert-Dufresne to receive Young Scientist Award

What does it mean to compute?

Reassessing the scientific method

SFI External Professor Santiago Elena elected to the American Academy of Microbiology

From cells to companies: Study shows how diversity scales within complex systems

SFI Press launches “The Economy as an Evolving Complex System IV”

New dataset reveals how U.S. law has grown more complex over the past century

Boldness is key to avoiding self-censorship, model shows

SFI welcomes Program Postdoctoral Fellow Jordan Kemp

Disentangling the Boltzmann brain hypothesis: Memory, entropy, and time