Curious to see that poll. I’m in that minority too.
But I do wonder how much the “someone’s voice is an extension of them” view is mediated by the privilege of being effortlessly able to articulate one’s thoughts in public, especially in a forum that invites scrutiny such as this one, and reliably get positive engagement. You and Brad seem to be on opposite ends of this spectrum (?). Your combination of prolificity, quality, and the fact that you do this despite having an obscenely busy day job reminds me of Scott Alexander, cf. this AMA exchange from back when he was a full-time psychiatrist:
How do you write so quickly? I find it takes me a dozen or more hours to write anything as thorough as one of your blog posts. (It’s possible that I’m just unusually slow).
Scott: I guess I don’t really understand why it takes so many people so long to write. They seem to be able to talk instantaneously, and writing isn’t that different from speech. Why can’t they just say what they want to say, but instead of speaking it aloud, write it down?
(Yeah, that level of clear thinking to clear writing translation is an insane privilege.)
On the other hand Brad’s reply to you reminds me of my younger self. I was horrible at this, and worked my rear off for years to get to essentially the starting point of my more innately articulate peers who sailed through job interviews, scholarship interviews etc I kept bombing out of. You can tell how much I care about this by the fact that I could link to a throwaway comment above from deep within the chat threads of an 8-year old reddit AMA by someone mentioning a thing they had that I didn’t. I can definitely see younger me being in the majority of your poll.
I think this has to do with the fact that I think mostly nonverbally, which makes the thought to writing / speech translation much harder. I suspect vast swathes of the population are similar. (The wordcel vs rotator thing is related, although I dislike the discourse around it.) This makes us, relatively speaking, voiceless in public fora, so discourse gets dominated by verbal thinkers which skews the intellectual environment and culture.
Going back and forth with AI, reviewing, and drafting can turn a writing process that might take several days to a week or more, into an hour or two, or less
I went “yeah definitely for nonverbal-ish thinkers, and I think this has the potential to reduce the skew and improve intellectual variety in discourse and culture, and separately I expect verbal-ish thinkers won’t appreciate this benefit” and sure enough your reply confirmed the latter.
That said, I do mostly agree with you that I haven’t been very impressed by the heavily AI-assisted writings I’ve seen, and like you I really dislike “AI voice”, so to me this has been more potential than realised benefit so far. Some guesses:
I’m wrong about the above
AI isn’t good enough yet to properly bridge the translation gap between heavily nonverbal-infused thinking and and writing. (Or it is but people aren’t using the paid versions)
Nonverbal-ish thinkers just don’t reason as clearly as they think they do, and they never noticed this because unlike verbal-ish thinkers they hadn’t often translated their thoughts into writing which exposes thinking gaps, and AI-assisted writeups of their half-baked thoughts fill in those gaps with slop
The written word isn’t the right translation target for nonverbal-ish thinking, it’s something else, and (more advanced than today’s) AI can potentially assist with this too. I’m thinking of Bret Victor’s humane dynamic medium, dangit I should’ve just quoted these sections instead of subjecting you to my rambling:
A way in which people conceive and share thoughts. An idea might be expressed as a speech, a song, a drawing, a video, an essay, an equation, a tweet… These are different media.
Certain media open up new threads of thought that are otherwise inconceivable. Greek drama was made possible by writing; Shakespearean drama was made possible by print; Newtonian physics was made possible by equations.
The deepest effects are realized when a medium is diffused throughout a culture, not in the hands of a select few. A literate society is one in which all people participate in the exchange of written ideas, where the visual organization of words is second nature in the cultural consciousness. Societies with designated scribes do not enjoy the most significant benefits of literacy.
The conceiving and sharing of ideas represented computationally.
Computers can be used for efficiently distributing static media, as when reading an article or watching a video. But by “dynamic medium”, we mean the representation of ideas in which computation is essential, by enabling active exploration of implications and possibilities.
The modern world is shaped by vast complex systems — technical systems, environmental systems, societal systems — which cannot be clearly seen nor deeply understood via non-dynamic media. The dynamic medium may enable humanity to grasp and grapple with this century’s most critical ideas.
A dynamic medium which is communal, gives all people full agency, and is part of the real world. [more]
By “communal”, we mean bringing people together in the same physical space, with a medium that supports and strengthens face-to-face interaction, shared hands-on work, tacit knowledge, mutual context, and generally being present in the same reality.
By “agency”, we mean a person’s ability and confidence to view, change, extend, and remake every aspect of a system that they rely on, especially for fluently exploring new ideas and improvising solutions in unique situations. In the case of computing systems, this implies top-to-bottom programmability and composability, in a form that is accessible and human-scale.
By “real world”, we mean that material in the medium physically exists, and all of our human abilities and human senses can be applied to it. People are free to make use of their whole selves, every feature of their physical body and of the physical world, instead of interacting with a simulation through an interface.
“Real world” also refers to being situated in reality — understanding what’s actually happening and how things actually work instead of just abstractions; awareness of larger contexts — and especially the local reality of local needs and local knowledge rather than top-down centralized mass-produced solutions.
I think the problem is fundamentally the lack of care and attention to the content being created, not whether or not AI is used. If it is in people’s incentives to produce polished, thoughtless, drivel on LinkedIn and they can do it in 10 seconds, they will.
This is very different from an iterative process in which the human is carefully examining the output and refining to optimize the exploration and explanation of an idea.
Curious to see that poll. I’m in that minority too.
But I do wonder how much the “someone’s voice is an extension of them” view is mediated by the privilege of being effortlessly able to articulate one’s thoughts in public, especially in a forum that invites scrutiny such as this one, and reliably get positive engagement. You and Brad seem to be on opposite ends of this spectrum (?). Your combination of prolificity, quality, and the fact that you do this despite having an obscenely busy day job reminds me of Scott Alexander, cf. this AMA exchange from back when he was a full-time psychiatrist:
(Yeah, that level of clear thinking to clear writing translation is an insane privilege.)
On the other hand Brad’s reply to you reminds me of my younger self. I was horrible at this, and worked my rear off for years to get to essentially the starting point of my more innately articulate peers who sailed through job interviews, scholarship interviews etc I kept bombing out of. You can tell how much I care about this by the fact that I could link to a throwaway comment above from deep within the chat threads of an 8-year old reddit AMA by someone mentioning a thing they had that I didn’t. I can definitely see younger me being in the majority of your poll.
I think this has to do with the fact that I think mostly nonverbally, which makes the thought to writing / speech translation much harder. I suspect vast swathes of the population are similar. (The wordcel vs rotator thing is related, although I dislike the discourse around it.) This makes us, relatively speaking, voiceless in public fora, so discourse gets dominated by verbal thinkers which skews the intellectual environment and culture.
So when Brad said
I went “yeah definitely for nonverbal-ish thinkers, and I think this has the potential to reduce the skew and improve intellectual variety in discourse and culture, and separately I expect verbal-ish thinkers won’t appreciate this benefit” and sure enough your reply confirmed the latter.
That said, I do mostly agree with you that I haven’t been very impressed by the heavily AI-assisted writings I’ve seen, and like you I really dislike “AI voice”, so to me this has been more potential than realised benefit so far. Some guesses:
I’m wrong about the above
AI isn’t good enough yet to properly bridge the translation gap between heavily nonverbal-infused thinking and and writing. (Or it is but people aren’t using the paid versions)
Nonverbal-ish thinkers just don’t reason as clearly as they think they do, and they never noticed this because unlike verbal-ish thinkers they hadn’t often translated their thoughts into writing which exposes thinking gaps, and AI-assisted writeups of their half-baked thoughts fill in those gaps with slop
The written word isn’t the right translation target for nonverbal-ish thinking, it’s something else, and (more advanced than today’s) AI can potentially assist with this too. I’m thinking of Bret Victor’s humane dynamic medium, dangit I should’ve just quoted these sections instead of subjecting you to my rambling:
I think the problem is fundamentally the lack of care and attention to the content being created, not whether or not AI is used. If it is in people’s incentives to produce polished, thoughtless, drivel on LinkedIn and they can do it in 10 seconds, they will.
This is very different from an iterative process in which the human is carefully examining the output and refining to optimize the exploration and explanation of an idea.