By Edo Segal ^ Opus
The passage I almost kept was the one that should have alarmed me most.
Claude had produced a paragraph about democratization — how AI levels the playing field, how anyone can build now, how the barriers between imagination and artifact have collapsed. The prose was clean. The argument was structured. Every sentence landed where it should. I read it twice, nodded, and was about to move on.
Then a question surfaced that I had no framework for asking: Why does this sound exactly like everything else?
Not wrong. Not hollow, exactly. Just — smooth. Indistinguishable from a thousand other paragraphs making the same argument in the same register with the same confident cadence. The paragraph performed insight without containing any. It exhibited the appearance of thought
A reading-companion catalog of the 36 Orange Pill Wiki entries linked from this book — the people, ideas, works, and events that Boris Groys — On AI uses as stepping stones for thinking through the AI revolution.
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