Deleteduserrc
Noble Dust
Noble Dust
Sure, but are are we not moving away from the classic definition of being able to capture the transcendental, the fixed and unchangeable, as in a mimesis, and more towards continentalist theories of art. — Forgottenticket
Noble Dust
I think ‘genuine’ poetry is often something like the smoke generated from an intense spiritual encounter - say smoke rising from an altar, where the sacrifice is the poet’s encounter ( with something) — csalisbury
Between mouthfuls of apple pie,
they discuss the panda's defection,
the new twelfth-man problem, the low
cardinality of Jesus, and whether
Saint John broke the bread at the Lord's Supper
instead of the guest Aava.
Their talk is either philosophical
on the one hand, or distressing personal
on the other.
Eve, it is whispered, died of exposure. — csalisbury
Noble Dust
This would be something like collective smoke filtered through another medium to produce uncanny almost-poem plumes. — csalisbury
Janus
Deleteduserrc
Overall though, I'm interested in why we find this interesting. Poetry feels like the most fragile art form because language is so fleeting and changes so much, and it's emotional content is so personal. So, as a lay poet and songwriter, and as a lover of words, I do feel some sense of being attacked here. If AI can write better poetry than us, and if our poetry is so fragile in the first place, then what does this even achieve for AI, and what is achieved via AI for us? Our words are already faulty and failing. Why should we use Ai to pantomime ourselves and taunt our failures with caricatures of what we've tried to say in the past? — Noble Dust
Forgottenticket
Sure, and that's the cultural context, at least per your view of current poetry. — Noble Dust
Brett
fdrake
Frank Apisa
javra
Between mouthfuls of apple pie,
they discuss the panda's defection,
the new twelfth-man problem, the low
cardinality of Jesus, and whether
Saint John broke the bread at the Lord's Supper
instead of the guest Aava.
Their talk is either philosophical
on the one hand, or distressing personal
on the other.
Eve, it is whispered, died of exposure. — csalisbury
Noble Dust
One potential, positive, way of framing that comes to mind is : it helps us, by negation, to focus on what is important to us in poetry. If an AI can do this and this, then maybe it can help us recognize when we, too, are in autopilot, just doing this and this, deluding ourselves. not to shut us down, but refocus. — csalisbury
The second thought is that the AI becomes just another part of the natural world, and its words are just one swirl of things among others - they’re an accretion of language. I’ve been reading Moby Dick and Starbuck gets at Ahab about seeing an offense in something incapable of giving offense. It’s just another part of what is now. — csalisbury
Noble Dust
The AI poetry reminds me of this high level of technical know-how sans the burning desire to express something that one holds to be important — javra
As an apropos, for decades now, one litmus test for good quality poetry I’ve pointed out to is the poet's ability to express the positive aspects of intense romantic love via metaphorical concepts in manners that don’t result in kitsch, i.e. in something one deems to be silly if not worse. This to me is one of the most difficult things to accomplish via poetry. — javra
javra
Deleteduserrc
Brett
Robots aren't conscious; and they produce interesting poems. Can we start from there, please? — csalisbury
Deleteduserrc
That’s the problem isn’t it? Are they actually producing anything? It’s like saying a sausage machine produce sausages without input from humans. — Brett
Brett
Brett
Deleteduserrc
Brett
I think it’s good. — csalisbury
I’m only saying I think they’re pretty — csalisbury
Deleteduserrc
Brett
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