PERSON
Boris Groys
The philosopher who gave AI's cultural logic its sharpest anatomy—reading the machine not as a tool or a mind but as the embodied zeitgeist, the accumulated archive of a civilization made computable and available for diagnosis.
Boris Groys is the theorist who arrived at the AI moment already holding the correct instrument. Born in Leningrad in 1947, formed in the samizdat intellectual culture of the Soviet underground, Groys built his career by making visible the institutional machinery behind aesthetic value: the museum that produces worth through selection, the archive that constitutes culture through exclusion, the total design that aestheticizes every domain of modern life. His 1992 book On the New dissolved every Romantic assumption about creativity by reducing novelty to a relational fact—not a property of the object but a gap between the object and the archive. His 2023 e-flux essay “From Writing to Prompting” applied the same rigour to large language models, renaming them the zeitgeist-machine: not intelligent agents but the statistical compression of a civilization’s accumulated cultural production, made interrogable through prompting. The result is the most precise cultural theory of AI available, one that refuses both triumphalism and catastrophism by insisting that
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