Of course an artificial intelligence can do anything a human brain can, because an artificial intelligence can be as similar to a human brain as you want. — zookeeper
In the first example I showed this was a program that learned what things were and is then instructed to produce an image of that thing based upon what it has learned.
I think it is fair to say that is an example of genuine creativity because there is some motive there to succeed at producing the thing in question as an image.
It does not simply copy and paste an image...it starts from nothing and eventually converges upon an image that resembles what it has learned is that thing. — m-theory
Can computers be genuinely creative and/or create art? — m-theory
I would be most impressed by a computer that interrupted its performance of the task you had assigned to it, by saying, "Your work is just too boring. Here, listen to this song I have been composing."
A computer becoming bored and deciding to make up a tune would be a sign of computer intelligence. Emily Howell is a demonstration of David Cope's skill in instructing the computer. I find Emily Howell's composition interesting enough, but it did begin at David Cope's instigation. — Bitter Crank
When we talk about creativity in art, aren't we talking about how a 'thing',an art-work, reaches out to us in a way that goes beyond it self as a thing qua thing. — Cavacava
When an AI can engage in artwork that involves not just novelty but mutual adaptation as part of the reflection on the art, as art, I'll be satisfied we're dealing with art (maybe not good art). — JosephS
You can decide to call it art when you see it, and some regard this as the step that makes it art, the viewer, but it became art immediately by his actions. — Brett
Should a cloud that combines characteristics of Donatello's David with Michelangelo's be considered art? — JosephS
It's music and music is an art form. But I'd have difficulty calling the software the artist.
Where does that leave us? I suppose until the AI can be considered as having an identity separate from the programmer, it means the artist would be the programmer. — JosephS
When did it become art? When the picture was done printing? When it was put in a frame
and hung on a wall? Or my assertion, it became art as soon as the viewer thought of it as art? — ZhouBoTong
Your definition of art seems to include some aspect of sharing that experience with other humans. So I could not create anything just for myself that would be considered art? — ZhouBoTong
But you just said that if the creator did NOT intend to create art it is not art. Couldn't the programmer say they were not trying to create art, they were trying to create a computer program that generated previously unknown pleasant sounding noise? — ZhouBoTong
I think saying that "art" can only be created intentionally, is quite limiting and can result in music, paintings, poetry etc NOT counting as art. Meanwhile, EVERYTHING that is created by humans counts as art IF the person that made it said it is art? This seems problematic. — ZhouBoTong
OK, carry on talking among yourselves; the philosophy world seems as cliquey as any other. — David Rose
Maybe the true relevance of this discussion relates not to A.I.-produced texts but to the poststructuralist literary Theorists' argument that all literary texts are purely derived from preceding texts, as all linguistic statements are articulated from the pre-existing language; so literary texts might just as well be generated by computer programmes as by writers. That was part of the ideological anti-humanist stance of the poststructuralists, once fashionable although now sliding into the old-fashioned. — David Rose
The underlying premise is that the label art is a subjective attribution. — JosephS
Even saying "this isn't art" doesn't prevent the viewer/recorder from deriving art from it, at which point the viewer becomes the artist in extracting it/framing it. — JosephS
Things artistic, if I understand your meaning, are [1] things that might be considered art. Arguably unbounded. How about [2] things closely related in form or type to other things that are already typically perceived as art. Art and artists, as social disruptors, should rightfully chafe at this restriction. If the label art is essentially subjective so is artistic. It remains that my morning commute isn't art (it's a pain in the ass, daily slog) unless I call it so, and at which point you tell me that my art is lame-ass crap, which I agree with.
Is the set of things artistic larger than the set of things that are art? With definition [1] above it would seem the proposition is true. [2], to my eye, is not as clear. If 'artistic' gets us to the clouds that look like Mickey and Minnie Mouse, but doesn't include my latest bowel movement, or if artistic includes my dog barking chopsticks but not the sound of my coughing up phlegm, this proposition is not nearly as clear cut. — JosephS
OK, carry on talking among yourselves; the philosophy world seems as cliquey as any other. — David Rose
It's difficult to believe programmed computers would develop that self-reflexivity. — David Rose
Maybe the true relevance of this discussion relates not to A.I.-produced texts but to the poststructuralist literary Theorists' argument that all literary texts are purely derived from preceding texts, as all linguistic statements are articulated from the pre-existing language; so literary texts might just as well be generated by computer programmes as by writers. That was part of the ideological anti-humanist stance of the poststructuralists, once fashionable although now sliding into the old-fashioned. — David Rose
it lies in this same circularity of defining what constitutes a 'literary' text, and by whom. — David Rose
Take as an example a work that WAS NEVER INTENDED to be "art" but was deemed "art" by a viewer. Has the viewer become the artists in that case? Or is this somehow NOT "art"? — ZhouBoTong
Excuse the time taken to reply. — Brett
I think it makes sense at the least, or as a beginning, to say that an artist produces art, to begin with the artist. — Brett
I was wondering, if we destroyed all art, made it disappear, what would go and what would be left? — Brett
Excuse me while I wipe away the hubris. — Brett
I usually regard your posts as quite reasonable. — Brett
Throwing so many questions at me in one post didn’t seem like an attempt to address my post. — Brett
I mean, did you expect me to address each question? — Brett
It seemed more like a dismissal of the query. — Brett
Anyway, I think the subject has been done to death, — Brett
only humans produce art. — Brett
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