Judgment was always the operational core of pre-Romantic textual production, from the medieval compiler's choice of which passages to preserve to the Enlightenment editor's determination of which contributions to the Encyclopédie met the project's standard. AI makes judgment more necessary, not less: when the generation of raw material is cheap, the scarce resource becomes evaluation.
Voice, in the demystified sense, is not an ineffable essence but a biographical residue — the texture of engagement with language shaped by everything the person has experienced. AI can replicate style (the formal features that can be catalogued) but not voice (the weight that comes from a specific life lived in language). The distinction matters because it locates what persists of the individual contribution without requiring the metaphysical claim the Romantic framework made.
Responsibility ties back to a structure older than Romanticism: the medieval compiler was responsible for the accuracy of his compilation; the Renaissance editor for the quality of his encyclopedia; the Enlightenment translator for the fidelity of her translation. Each accepted accountability for the act of releasing a text into the world. The same responsibility attaches to the person who collaborates with AI and publishes the result. The collaboration distributes production. It does not distribute responsibility.
Each of these elements is cultivable in ways genius is not. Judgment is developed through practice, feedback, and accumulated experience. Voice is deepened through attentive living. Responsibility is accepted through commitment. The practical post-Romantic creative life is organized around the cultivation of these three — not around the mystical gift of originality.
Woodmansee's work does not articulate the judgment-voice-responsibility triad in these exact terms, but the structure is consistent with her framework and is made explicit in the simulation that the Martha Woodmansee — On AI volume develops. The framing is offered as what survives when Woodmansee's critique has done its work — the answer to the post-Romantic question of what authorship still means.
Related traditions articulate similar triads. Aristotle's phronesis (practical judgment) is closely related to the judgment element. The Romantic concept of voice is reframed here as biography rather than essence. The ethical concept of responsibility extends beyond authorship into any act of releasing something into the world and standing behind it.
Judgment scales as generation becomes cheap. AI makes generation abundant. The scarce resource — distinguishing competent output from illuminating output, plausible argument from true argument, adequate prose from necessary prose — is evaluative judgment.
Voice as biography, not essence. Voice is the residue of a life lived in language. Style can be mimicked; voice cannot, because it requires the weight that only actual living deposits. This distinction preserves the individual contribution without requiring the Romantic metaphysics.
Responsibility attaches to release. The person who publishes a text — decides it is ready, puts their name on it, accepts the consequences — is responsible for it regardless of how it was produced. Responsibility is an ethical concept, not a Romantic one.
Cultivable rather than innate. Unlike genius, each of these elements is developable. Judgment through practice. Voice through attentive living. Responsibility through commitment. The post-Romantic creative life has a pedagogy the Romantic framework lacked.
Sufficient for evaluation. These three provide an evaluative framework adequate to AI-assisted production. Was the judgment sound? Is the voice specific? Has the author accepted responsibility? These questions yield actionable evaluations without requiring determinations of originality the Romantic framework demanded.