CONCEPT
The Machine Agon
The builder's permanent contest with AI—unlike the poet's agon with a fixed, dead predecessor, an agonistic encounter that refreshes itself with every prompt, requiring the creative will to be regenerated not once but continuously.
In
Harold Bloom's theory of literary creation,
the agon—the psychodynamic contest between newcomer and overwhelming predecessor—was a relationship with a fixed, finite opponent: the dead poet whose body of work could not grow, could not respond, could not generate new challenges in real time. The machine agon is structurally different in a way that changes the demands it makes on the builder. The machine is present, responsive, and tireless. It does not lie in the grave while the builder struggles with its influence. It generates new output the moment the builder returns from the coffee shop with a notebook, fresh prose that is again polished and seductive and requiring of the same creative resistance that yesterday's output required. The machine agon has no natural termination point: the predecessor refreshes itself continuously, and the strong builder must regenerate the will to resist with every session.
[YOU
] on AI treats this as the central discipline of the new creative moment: