434 lines
21 KiB
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434 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
IASC
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[1]Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture
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[7]Hedgehog [8]The Hedghog Review -- Critical Reflections on Contemporary
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Culture
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[28]THR Web Features / June 11, 2024
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AI as Self-Erasure
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Humanity’s will to disappear is being installed in the omni-operating system.
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[29]Matthew B. Crawford
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( Piranka/iStock.)
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[30] THR Web Features
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[31]Matthew B. Crawford
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Matthew B. Crawford writes the Substack [32]Archedelia and is a senior fellow
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at the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture at the University of Virginia.
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His books include Why We Drive: Toward a Philosophy of the Open Road, The World
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Beyond Your Head: On Becoming an Individual in an Age of Distraction, and the
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best-selling Shop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into the Value of Work.
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Categories
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• [33]Essays
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Related Topics
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• [34]Work
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• [35]Technology
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• [36]Self
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Share
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• [37]
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• [38]
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• [39]
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• [40]
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Elevated “deaths of despair” and declining birth rates in the West must be due
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to an array of factors, hard to tease apart. My hunch is that one of them is
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what the sociologist Richard Sennett called “the specter of uselessness.” He
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meant feeling redundant at work. But there is a deeper, existential version of
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this that may arise when the world feels already occupied, so there is no place
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for you to grow into and make your own.
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In the normal course of human society, you are born into a culture that has
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prepared the way for you. It initiates you into its language and tells a story
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of where you came from. It is saturated with meaning due to a chain of
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begettings that reaches back in time, each generation of which started and grew
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through acts of love: at conception, and in the ongoing work of teaching,
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transmission and care. The world is welcoming, in other words. It was built by
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your ancestors, and they imagined you long before you arrived.^[41]11[42]xThe
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“owned space” spoken of by our Nietzscheans is an inherited space, not a
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conquest of individual will. They wondered what sort of work you might do,
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before you knew there is such a thing as work. Your parents may have recognized
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the echo of a sibling or a parent in your face as you sought the nipple. They
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smiled at you.
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This sense of a world handed down in love is interrupted when the basic
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contours and possibilities of life appear to be ordered by impersonal forces.
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Small Language Models
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I was at a small dinner a few weeks ago in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Seated next
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to me was a man who related that his daughter had just gotten married. As the
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day approached, he had wanted to say some words at the reception, as is fitting
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for the father of the bride. It can be hard to come up with the right words for
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such an occasion, and he wanted to make a good showing. He said he gave a few
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prompts to ChatGPT, facts about her life, and sure enough it came back with a
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pretty good wedding toast. Maybe better than what he would have written. But in
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the end, he didn’t use it, and composed his own. This strikes me as telling,
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and the intuition that stopped him from deferring to AI is worth bringing to
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the surface.
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To use the machine-generated speech would have been to absent himself from this
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significant moment in the life of his daughter, and in his own life. It would
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have been to not show up for her wedding, in some sense. I am reminded of a
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passage in Tocqueville where he noticed that America seemed to be on a
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trajectory that would have it erecting “an immense tutelary power” that wants
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only what is best for us, and is keen to “save [us] the trouble of living.”
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In Aristotelian language, human “being” is an ergon, an activity or work that
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is distinctive of the peculiar sort of animals that we are, and in this the use
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of language is key. There have been rare cases of anatomically normal children
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who (whether by some monstrous crime or by circumstance) matured without human
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society, with no initiation into a language. They grew into feral creatures,
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resembling a human in form only.^[43]22[44]x “Just before dawn on January 9,
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1800, a mysterious creature emerged from a forest in southern France. Although
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he was human in form and walked upright, his habits were those of a young male
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animal. He was wearing only a tattered shirt, but did not seem troubled by the
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cold. Showing no modesty about his nakedness, he ate greedily, seizing roasted
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potatoes from a hot fire. He seemed to have no language skills, only grunting
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occasionally.” From the [45]jacket of The Forbidden Experiment by Roger
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Shattuck.
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LLMs (large language models such as ChatGPT) won’t return us to a
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pre-linguistic state, but they do point to a post-human one. In The Language
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Animal, Charles Taylor points out that in our use of language, “we are
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continuously responsive to rightness, and that is why we always recognize the
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relevance of a challenge that we have misspoken.” In other words, we care.
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This is because, unlike an LLM or a parrot, things have significance for us,
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and we search for words that will do justice to this significance. For example,
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you try to find words that are apt for a wedding toast: ideally something both
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true and pleasing, maybe built around some anecdote that is emblematic of your
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relationship with your daughter, hopefully funny, with just the right
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touch—warm but not maudlin, suggesting the subtle and evolving currents of
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affection (and maybe conflict, too) between you over the years as she has grown
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into a woman. You don’t want to over-share, but you want to take some risks
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too, because you sense that showing faith in the love of your daughter, and in
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the goodwill of your guests (some of whom you have never met) will create the
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enlarged circle of intimacy and witness that you are hoping to realize on this
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occasion.
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As the father sits with pen and paper, he strives to encompass in words the
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elusive truth of his daughter, as seen from the unique vantage of a father, in
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a way fitting for this pivotal moment in the progression of her life. He may
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find that through the effort of articulating this relationship, it is more
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fully revealed to him. As Taylor says, the “right word” discloses, “brings the
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phenomenon properly into view for the first time. Discovery and invention are
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two sides of the same coin; we devise an expression which allows what we are
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striving to encompass to appear.”
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We do this also with respect to ourselves; we “self-articulate” as part of the
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lifelong process of bringing ourselves more fully into view‚ how I stand, the
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particular shape that various universal goods have taken in my own biography,
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and in my aspirations. This is a moving target. One may cringe at one’s younger
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self. What appeared to be an episode of courage at eighteen now strikes me as
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dickishness; what seemed righteous then looks self-righteous now as I fill in
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my own past with fresh articulations, corresponding to fresh intimations of the
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good, the fruit of a long process of acquiring depth as a human being. Or I may
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try to look back at my younger self with kindness, in the hope of overcoming
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regret about the decisions I made. We do all this with words, in our internal
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monologues.
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What would it mean, then, to outsource a wedding toast? To use Heidegger’s
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language, some entity has “leaped in” on my behalf and disburdened me of the
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task of being human. For Heidegger, this entity is “das Man,” an anonymized
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other that stands in for me, very much like Kierkegaard’s “the Public.” It is a
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generalized consciousness—think of it as the geist of large language models.
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LLMs are built on enormous data sets—essentially, all language that is
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machine-scrapable from the Internet. They are tasked with answering the
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question, “given the previous string of words, what word is most likely to
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occur next?” They thus represent what the philosopher Talbot Brewer recently
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referred to as “the statistical center of gravity” of all language (and I am
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following Brewer’s lead in viewing LLMs through the lens of Taylor’s account of
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language). Or rather, all language that is on the Internet. This includes the
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great literature of the past, of course. But it includes a whole lot more of
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the present: marketing-speak, what passes for journalism, the blather produced
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by all who suffer from PowerPoint brain. But put aside the impoverished quality
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of the language that these LLMs are being trained on. If we accept that the
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challenge of articulating life in the first person, as it unfolds, is central
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to human beings, then to allow an AI to do this on our behalf suggests
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self-erasure of the human.
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In a presentation in Charlottesville in April that is yet unpublished, at
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University of Virginia’s Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture, Brewer
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referred to “degenerative AI.” Because the new AIs are language machines, they
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are “aimed right at our essence.” Brewer is not himself a Christian, but he
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finds Christian terms apt for thinking about the problem: We are created in the
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image and likeness of God, who is the Word.
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Talking to an Anonymity
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Self-erasure through absorption into a mass (as distinct from a community) is
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not a problem created by LLMs; it was noticed by Heidegger and Kierkegaard, and
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by Tocqueville before them. Around the turn of the millennium, we were
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fascinated with “the wisdom of crowds” and the generative possibilities of the
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hive mind. We were told that there is a superior global intelligence arising in
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the Web itself. This collective mind is more meta, more synoptic and synthetic,
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than any one of us, and aren’t these the defining features of intelligence?
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[46]Writing about the Web in 2006, Jaron Lanier said that “In the last year or
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two the trend has been to remove the scent of people, so as to come as close as
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possible to simulating the appearance of content emerging out of the Web as if
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it were speaking to us as a supernatural oracle.” He was referring to
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“consensus Web filters” that assemble material from other sites that are
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themselves aggregators of other sites. “We are now reading what a collectivity
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algorithm derives from what other collectivity algorithms derived from what
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collectives chose from what a population of mostly amateur writers wrote
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anonymously.”
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Lanier points out that these developments aren’t confined to online culture.
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The elevation of the collective through the fetish of aggregation is “having a
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profound influence on how decisions are made in America,” in government
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agencies, corporate planning departments, and universities. He reports that, as
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a consultant, he used to be asked to “test an idea or propose a new one to
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solve a problem. In the last couple years I’ve been asked to work quite
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differently. You might find me and the other consultants filling out survey
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forms or tweaking edits to a collective essay.”
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Lanier suggests there are institutional reasons for the appeal of collectivism
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in large organizations: “If the principle is correct, then individuals should
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not be required to take on risks or responsibilities.” This is especially
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attractive given that we live in times of tremendous uncertainties coupled with
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infinite liability phobia, and we must function within institutions that are
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loyal to no executive, much less to any lower-level member. Every individual
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who is afraid to say the wrong thing within his or her organization is safer
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when hiding behind a wiki or some other Meta aggregation ritual.
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In his own participation in such rituals, Lanier reports that “what I’ve seen
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is a loss of insight and subtlety, a disregard for the nuances of considered
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opinions, and an increased tendency to enshrine the official or normative
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beliefs of an institution.”
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At the same gathering in Charlottesville where Tal Brewer spoke of
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“degenerative AI,” sociologist Joseph E. Davis pointed out that AI is rushing
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into domains that have already been vacated of the full exercise of human
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judgment, making the substitution less obviously a degradation. Education is
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conceived as the mere exchange of information, unconditioned by relations of
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authority and care between teacher and student. The practice of medicine has
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been partly reduced to following guidelines that claim to advance
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“evidence-based medicine” (but with outcomes that are often worse than those
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produced by the judgments of experienced practitioners).^[47]33[48]xSee Justin
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Mutter, “A New Stranger at the Bedside: Industrial Quality Management and the
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Erosion of Clinical Judgment in American Medicine” for an [49]account of the
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exponential growth of guidelines that medical practitioners must follow, and
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its effect on care. Essentially, doctors have been proletarianized and are
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themselves the object of minute surveillance. Their incentives are to follow
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guidelines even when they know the outcome will not be good. Dating apps
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render the process of selecting a mate as something machine-optimizable through
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search criteria and “cross-platform integration with social media accounts” (or
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something like that).
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But let us go back further yet, before the rise of the Web, to see how AI
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expresses (and advances) a more general tendency of the democratic social
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condition. Writing in the 1840s, Kierkegaard noticed something significant
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going on with the rise of the newspaper:
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Nowadays one can talk with anyone, and it must be admitted that people’s
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opinions are exceedingly sensible, yet the conversation leaves one with the
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impression of having talked to an anonymity.... Our judgments are “so
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objective, so all-inclusive, that it is a matter of complete indifference
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who expresses them.... In Germany they even have phrase books for the use
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of lovers, and it will end with lovers sitting together talking
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anonymously. (Kierkegaard, The Present Age)
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The German lovers “go meta,” as we would put it today, which is a kind of
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effacing of one’s own perspective as an interested party, as someone involved.
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We instead think of ourselves as representatives of a general Public.
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[W]e think over the relationships of life in a higher relationship till in
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the end the whole generation has become a representation, who
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represent...it is difficult to say whom; and who think about these
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relationships...for whose sake it is not easy to discover. The disobedient
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youth is no longer in fear of his schoolmaster—the relation is rather one
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of indifference in which schoolmaster and pupil discuss how a good school
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should be run. To go to school no longer means to be in fear of the master,
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or merely to learn, but rather implies being interested in the problem of
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education. (Kierkegaard, The Present Age)
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Kierkegaard here connects the process of becoming a third party to oneself to
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the process of democratic leveling. This has the effect of effacing real human
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connection.
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In the end, the whole age becomes a committee. A father no longer curses
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his son in anger, using all his parental authority, nor does the son defy
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his father, a conflict which might end in the inwardness of forgiveness; on
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the contrary, their relationship is irreproachable, for it is really in
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process of ceasing to exist... (Kierkegaard, The Present Age)
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For Kierkegaard, differentiating relations of authority are the incubators of
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genuine attachments, and these in turn make possible moments of rebellion. It
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is through the attachments and the rebellions both that we become individuals.
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Fake egalitarianism provides an excuse—no, a principle!—for shrinking from this
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task. As representatives of a general Public, there is no complementarity
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between us, no differentiation and dependence, but instead a colorless cohesion
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of interchangeable, autonomous subjects. Liberal public culture is a culture of
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polite separation.
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This mood of interchangeability is likely to deepen as AI saturates the world
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and we are tempted to let it stand in for our own subjectivity. But, like that
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father at his daughter’s wedding, we are still free to refuse it.
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This essay first appeared on Matthew Crawford’s [50]Archedelia Substack.
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[minihog-ri]
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Sign up for our newsletter
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[54] Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture [55] University of Virginia
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Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture
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The Hedgehog Review
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• [62]Browse
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• [63]THR Web Features
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Join the Conversation
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• [70]
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[71]Support our work
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© 2025 Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture
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References:
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[1] http://iasculture.org/
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[2] http://iasculture.org/about
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[4] http://iasculture.org/scholars
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[5] http://iasculture.org/events
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[6] https://iasculture.org/support
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[7] https://hedgehogreview.com/
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[8] https://hedgehogreview.com/
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[9] https://hedgehogreview.com/issues
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[10] https://hedgehogreview.com/topics
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[11] https://hedgehogreview.com/web-features
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[12] https://hedgehogreview.com/about
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[13] https://hedgehogreview.com/contact
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[14] https://hedgehogreview.com/web-features/thr/posts/ai-as-self-erasure#
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[15] https://hedgehogreview.com/web-features/thr/posts/ai-as-self-erasure#
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[17] https://hedgehogreview.com/order
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[19] https://hedgehogreview.com/web-features/thr/posts/ai-as-self-erasure#
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[20] https://hedgehogreview.com/issues
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[21] https://hedgehogreview.com/topics
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[22] https://hedgehogreview.com/web-features
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[23] https://hedgehogreview.com/about
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[24] https://hedgehogreview.com/contact
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[25] https://hedgehogreview.com/web-features/thr/posts/ai-as-self-erasure#
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[26] https://hedgehogreview.com/web-features/thr/posts/ai-as-self-erasure#
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[27] https://hedgehogreview.com/order
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[28] https://hedgehogreview.com/web-features/thr
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[29] https://hedgehogreview.com/contributors/matthew-b-crawford
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[30] https://hedgehogreview.com/web-features/thr
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[31] https://hedgehogreview.com/contributors/matthew-b-crawford
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[32] https://mcrawford.substack.com/
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[33] https://hedgehogreview.com/web-features/categories/essays
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[34] https://hedgehogreview.com/topics/work
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[35] https://hedgehogreview.com/topics/technology
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[36] https://hedgehogreview.com/topics/self
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[37] https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Fhedgehogreview.com%2Fweb-features%2Fthr%2Fposts%2Fai-as-self-erasure
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[38] https://twitter.com/intent/tweet/?text=AI%20as%20Self-Erasure&url=https%3A%2F%2Fhedgehogreview.com%2Fweb-features%2Fthr%2Fposts%2Fai-as-self-erasure&via=hedgehogreview
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[39] http://www.reddit.com/submit?url=https%3A%2F%2Fhedgehogreview.com%2Fweb-features%2Fthr%2Fposts%2Fai-as-self-erasure&title=AI%20as%20Self-Erasure
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[40] javascript:window.print();
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[41] https://hedgehogreview.com/web-features/thr/posts/ai-as-self-erasure#
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[42] https://hedgehogreview.com/web-features/thr/posts/ai-as-self-erasure#
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[43] https://hedgehogreview.com/web-features/thr/posts/ai-as-self-erasure#
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[44] https://hedgehogreview.com/web-features/thr/posts/ai-as-self-erasure#
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[45] https://books.google.com/books?id=9COPTtX16IIC&q=%22forbidden+experiment%22&pg=PP1
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[46] https://www.edge.org/conversation/jaron_lanier-digital-maoism-the-hazards-of-the-new-online-collectivism?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email
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[47] https://hedgehogreview.com/web-features/thr/posts/ai-as-self-erasure#
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[48] https://hedgehogreview.com/web-features/thr/posts/ai-as-self-erasure#
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[49] https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/1/article/748875
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[50] https://mcrawford.substack.com/?utm_source=global-search
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[54] https://iasculture.org/
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[55] http://www.virginia.edu/
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[56] http://iasculture.org/about
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[57] http://iasculture.org/research
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