I have read too many crappy writers that have gotten rich and famous to believe all the bullcrap about 'purity' or that bestseller of the week #223 is somehow better because the writer wrote it on slate using chalk.
Now, convince me that handcarts are better than semis. Or a shovel is more 'pure' than a backhoe. I bet you like carrying buckets of water for your bath and heating them up with a campfire, too.
AI is a tool. nothing more. People who use the tool correctly do a good job. All the arguments apply to people who use a shovel to start a fire, but AI is a difficult tool to actually master. You have to think of it more like a piano than a broom.
I don't use it much except for spellchecking, but that's because I haven't mastered the tool. 'generic' music is long gone. 'generic' art is too. The only reason people are complaining is that AI is replacing the 'generic' authors now, too. AI can produce generic, flavorless text just as easily as internet writers can, and that's driving the untalented and lazy crazy.
And BTW- most people ARE fundamentally less than they think of themselves. AI is not dehumanizing at all; it's simply reminding people, unpleasantly, of how useless and worthless they really are, an unforgivable sin. You want to be better? Then BE BETTER. You have the potential. Stop being lazy.
And the minute you start paying my rent, I will consider your opinion.
I think you’ve really missed some fundamental points here. It’s not about ‘purity’ or ‘good books’ vs ‘bad books’ or how well a book sells or how much money a book earns—whatever those things mean to you—it’s about meaning and how intentionality creates meaning. When it comes to art, the small things, the tiny, almost imperceptible individual decisions we make are what helps create that meaning. We are, after all, deciding how best we want to convey the messages and meanings in our heads to others. Only we know how best to share the ideas in our minds.
To address your examples, no, a handcart is not better than a semi in an industrial sense. One unquestionably performs their common purpose better than the other. But that purpose is industrial. If it were artistic, if its intent was to carry a message or express meaning in some way, then the tool the artist would choose to use is part of the intentionality required to convey that message. In that context, a semi might be far superior to a handcart—or vice-versa. It depends, again, on the meaning the artist seeks to create.
As writers, we seek to create meaning using the tool we have at hand: language. In that respect, we are limited. Language is so impossibly large that it is incapable of ever being fully understood by any specific person, but we limit ourselves to it alone. No pictures or sounds or movements or anything other than words on the page (though there’s plenty of argument that the page itself is part of the medium). Ultimately, the way in which we create meaning comes down to our choices about every aspect of our language: syntax, diction, punctuation, all of it. Everything we put on the page is ours, hand-crafted to be exactly how we want it to be so that the meaning we seeking to make is made as well as it can be.
The article (and me, for what it’s worth) bemoans the loss of that intentionality. Specifically, that there are very many people who do not understand how intentional writing is, how important the minutiae is to making meaning, and they offload much of it to LLMs. In particular, LLMs, as language generators that do not retain facts or concepts, that are not intelligent, that serve simply to string together that which writers must use intentionally to create their meaning without thought or intelligence, can serve only one purpose to us: providing us with pre-decided language, making those little decisions for us. Certainly, we can choose which of these decisions to take and which to reject, but ultimately, we have not made those initial decisions.
This does not make a written work ‘impure’ or diminish its worth (again, whatever those things mean to you), it only makes it less intentional. It muddles the meaning. It prevents us from communicating with one another as best we can (even if it doesn’t appear that way) or striving to learn how to do so on our own. It removes intentionality from our creations so that we no longer think of the decisions it makes for us or how they contribute to the meaning we seek to express. In this way, it is dehumanizing. In this way, it makes us less than what we are. In this way, I do think using AI in the writing process is bad. You can, and clearly have, attach the desire to offload these tiny decisions to laziness and stupidity, to ‘sin’ (whatever that means to you), but personally, I think there’s much more to it than that.