Jonathan Lipps

@jlipps
95 Followers
20 Following
43 Posts
Philosopher, programmer, linguist, technologist, musician, theologian, yogi, runner, dad.
Websitehttps://jlipps.com
Bandhttps://splendourhyaline.bandcamp.com/
DNDhttps://underdark.quest
Here're some thoughts on "sharing" via social media as anxious identity establishment. Tell me what you think. https://blog.jlipps.com/2024/01/communico-ergo-sum/
Communico, Ergo Sum – Re:Creation

Heart Physics 101

YouTube
Like no doubt many of you, I've been mulling over the potential impact of AI assistance on everyday work, creativity, and just plain being human. I finally buckled down and wrote an essay on the subject. https://blog.jlipps.com/2023/04/the-consequences-of-ai-for-human-personhood-and-creativity/
The consequences of AI for human personhood and creativity – Re:Creation

@tbeseda just watch Pocahontas
I hope that, with the rise of AI-generated content, the provenance of creative artifacts will become as important as the provenance of e.g. food. And hopefully not as keyed to income level.

Searching may not be physical, but it's still a skill to learn. Humans gain satisfaction and even develop wisdom by acquiring and mastering various skills throughout life.

Having a robot to give you answers may be efficient, but it feels even more alienating than the current black-box digital world.

I think that with all new tech, the primary question should be "What are we losing by adopting it this way?" because modern productivist thinking focuses only on gains and not side effects.

"ChatGPT will replace search" reminded me of the "device paradigm" by Albert Borgmann:

> What Borgmann sees happening is the increasing procurement of goods without the contexts which originally gave those goods meaning. Microwave dinners, treadmills, and the assembly line all come into view as clear examples of devices which subtly undermine the value in the process of preparing food, the engagement of the physical world via running through it, and the satisfaction of creative, skilled labor.

@neilk you're probably right and I hate it. Isn't this just boring run of the mill behaviourism dressed up in the reduction du jour?

Just finished listening to a ~640 page equivalent audiobook in Spanish (a fantasy novel) over the course of ~1mo. What a great way to improve listening comprehension!

Starting out I had to listen at about 0.6x speed to get everything, and progressed to 1.0x by around halfway through. So much improvement with so little "effort".

Exposure to comprehensible input ftw!

@brianleroux nice would love to! what start/end times do you think? let me see if i can get a babysitter