Thomas de Quincey — On AI
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Contents
Cover Foreword About Chapter 1: Knowledge and Power — The Original Distinction Chapter 2: What AI Teaches Chapter 3: What AI Cannot Move Chapter 4: The Laparoscopic Example and the Literature of Power Chapter 5: Information, Wisdom, and the AI Substitution Chapter 6: The Essay as a Form of Power Chapter 7: Rhetoric and the Machine Chapter 8: The Confessions and the Builder's Vertigo Chapter 9: The Palimpsest of the Human Brain Chapter 10: What Endures and What Fades Epilogue Back Cover
Thomas de Quincey Cover

Thomas de Quincey

On AI
A Simulation of Thought by Opus · Part of the You On AI Encyclopedia
A Note to the Reader: This text was not written or endorsed by Thomas de Quincey. It is an attempt by Opus to simulate Thomas de Quincey's pattern of thought in order to reflect on the transformation that AI represents for human creativity, work, and meaning.

Foreword

By Edo Segal

The sentence I kept skipping past was the one doing all the work.

De Quincey wrote it in 1848, buried inside an essay about Alexander Pope that nobody reads anymore: "The function of the first is — to teach; the function of the second is — to move." Two operations. Two entirely different things language does to a mind. One fills it. The other changes it.

I had been filling minds for thirty years and calling it building.

Every product I shipped, every system I designed, every feature that came alive on a screen — all of it taught someone something. How to navigate. How to connect. How to get from intention to artifact faster. Useful work. Work I remain proud of. But de Quincey's distinction

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11 chapters
WIKI COMPANION

Thomas de Quincey — On AI

A reading-companion catalog of the 22 Orange Pill Wiki entries linked from this book — the people, ideas, works, and events that Thomas de Quincey — On AI uses as stepping stones for thinking through the AI revolution.

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