T.L. Morrisey

Showing posts with label the future. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the future. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 13, 2024

AI on the future of poetry

 

July 2021, beebalm 

Stephen Morrissey: Is there a future for poetry?


ChatGPT: Absolutely, poetry has a bright future. Here are a few reasons why:
  1. Digital Platforms: Social media and digital platforms like Instagram, Twitter, and Tumblr have given poets new ways to share their work and reach wider audiences. This accessibility has democratized poetry, allowing more voices to be heard.

  2. Diverse Voices: There is a growing appreciation for diverse voices and perspectives in poetry. Poets from various backgrounds, cultures, and experiences are gaining recognition, enriching the literary landscape.

  3. Spoken Word and Slam Poetry: These forms of poetry are thriving, particularly among younger generations. They offer dynamic, performance-based experiences that resonate with live audiences and often address contemporary social and political issues.

  4. Educational Emphasis: Poetry is increasingly being integrated into educational curricula, encouraging young people to engage with it creatively and critically.

  5. Collaborations and Interdisciplinary Projects: Poets are collaborating with artists from other disciplines, such as musicians, visual artists, and filmmakers, to create multimedia works that push the boundaries of traditional poetry.

  6. Publishing Opportunities: There are more opportunities for poets to publish their work through independent presses, self-publishing, and online journals.

  7. Cultural Relevance: Poetry continues to be a powerful tool for social commentary and personal expression, making it relevant in times of social change and upheaval.

In essence, poetry is evolving and adapting to contemporary society, ensuring its ongoing relevance and appeal.


Stephen Morrissey: That's interesting, maybe we should be more optimistic about the future of poetry.


ChatGPT: Absolutely! Optimism about the future of poetry is well-founded. Here are a few more reasons to feel hopeful:

  1. Community and Connection: Poetry fosters a sense of community and connection among readers and writers. Poetry readings, workshops, and festivals provide spaces for people to come together and share their love for the art form.

  2. Therapeutic Value: Poetry is increasingly being recognized for its therapeutic benefits. Writing and reading poetry can be a powerful means of processing emotions, dealing with trauma, and promoting mental well-being.

  3. Innovation and Experimentation: Poets are continually experimenting with form, language, and medium. This innovation keeps the art form fresh and exciting, attracting new audiences.

  4. Recognition and Awards: Prestigious awards and recognitions for poets, such as the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, and international prizes, highlight the significance of poetry in the literary world.

  5. Integration with Technology: Advances in technology, such as virtual reality and augmented reality, offer new ways to experience poetry. Interactive and immersive poetic experiences can attract tech-savvy audiences.

  6. Global Reach: The internet has made it possible for poets to reach global audiences. Translations and online platforms allow poetry to transcend linguistic and geographic barriers, fostering cross-cultural appreciation.

  7. Environmental and Social Advocacy: Many contemporary poets use their work to address pressing issues such as climate change, social justice, and human rights. This advocacy through poetry can inspire action and awareness.

By embracing these developments, poetry can continue to grow and thrive, resonating with people of all ages and backgrounds.

Tuesday, April 2, 2024

Artificial Intelligence and Poetry

 

2012
            


It is through human expression that we can defeat the over arching digital tyranny; through joy and poetry we can assert our humanity.

--Richard Olafson, Shifting Towards Vitalism (2023)


In the old days, when home computers were just beginning to be available to the public, some poets made poems using computer technology and their own original programmes; some of these poems were permutations of phrases, some resulted in Surrealistic visual images, and while a few of these poems were interesting they were basically meaningless as poetry and never real poems. Now we’ve moved on to Artificial Intelligence writing, well, anything you want it to write including poetry. 

There is a short video on YouTube of Joe Rogan telling us that blood, discovered at the bottom of the Ark of the Covenant, had been analysed and was the blood of Jesus Christ, proving both His divinity and His existence. This video was, of course, a creation of Artificial Intelligence, it was a hoax, an attempt to fool or deceive people. This, and other videos created by Artificial Intelligence, gives one pause, what if this video was of someone in authority making some statement that people believed but it was all lies or propaganda? We are concerned with AI because it is one of the recent technologies that could be disastrous for humanity, and excluding some positive uses the existence of AI, for most people, is frightening, it is to deceive the viewer. What do we believe, and who do we believe, if technology can now perfectly duplicate the voice and facial characteristics of people in authority? Or if AI can write fake texts? There have always been false or fake texts and there will be more in the future generated by AI technology. 

Why anyone would want to write AI poems is beyond me, there is no money in poetry, there is no fame, there is nothing to gain except possibly some amusement or novelty. AI can write screen plays, articles for Sports Illustrate magazine and newspapers, content for websites, PhD dissertations, term papers, or whatever someone wants and it is inexpensive, fast, possibly accurate, and he/she doesn't have to do the writing or pay an actual human writer. But poetry? Perhaps because poetry is of increasingly less value to society it is doubtful that anyone will write poems using AI except as a prank, a joke, or out of curiosity. But there is something important to learn from this possible use of Artificial Intelligence and poetry: it is to remember what it means to be human.

Can AI ever write poetry? It is not possible for one reason: poetry is the voice of the human soul and computers don't have souls. Even if computer technology becomes so sophisticated that a computer thinks it is an autonomous human being, that it attains "personhood", it will still not be poetry. Poetry requires a human being writing poems and this requires living in the physical world with real life relationships with other human beings. Even if an intelligent human-looking robot could be created, with built-in AI, it is still a computer and it has no soul. Even if you could programme in the functions of a soul--for instance, compassion, understanding, empathy, emotions, spirituality, awe, a family history, and reflection on the past--and this computer writes "poetry", it is still not poetry, it still can't express what the human soul can express. A human has a biological level of existence and a computer is man-made, it is a machine even if it is the most sophisticated machine made by man. And a computer can never have a style of writing that is honed by experience and a multiplicity of events that organize themselves randomly and are the result of events far too complicated to ever be duplicated or created in themselves. AI and its progression, a humanoid robot, is always manufactured by people, or descended from a generation of computers invented and manufactured by people; it is not created by sexual intercourse, there is no hormonal basis to AI, it has no belief in spirituality (or anything else), it has no traditions whether religious, ancestral, cultural, historical, or genetic that human beings have, and if sometime in the future it has some of these qualities, they will always be artificially created and not the result of human interaction; AI will never have genuine human qualities. Even if  one day AI can identify as "human" it is still not the real thing. If we come to a time when computers think they are human beings, or the equivalent of human beings, with free will and emotions and mobility, it is possible that robots will take over from human beings, but even then whatever a robot with AI can express will never be real poetry. AI can write a facsimile poem but never a real poem. By definition only a human being can write a real poem just as only a human being can react to that poem with emotions and human reflection. AI and the human soul are mutually exclusive. 

Tuesday, September 26, 2023

Justin Trudeau's Canada in 2030

 

Has any other Canadian prime minister ever been photographed like this?


Crystal Ball, oh truth telling Crystal Ball, what is our future as a country?

It's not good. Just extrapolate from what Justin Trudeau has done to the country since 2015: our standard of living has declined; numerous homeless people are in every city and town; if you are young you have probably already given up ever owning your own home; the cost of food is prohibitive; and on it goes. This is our present, but worse lies ahead.

Let's pretend: Justin survives as prime minister for the next two years and, in 2024-2025, he is re-elected with a majority government. And then we have another four years of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. What will Canada be like in 2029-2030 when Justin is old, wrinkled, and grey? 

1. There is no way you'll ever own your own home, that ended back in 2022. We will be a nation of renters. Lease your electric car, rent your apartment, own nothing, not even the clothes you're wearing. You'll be living in the fifteen minute city so, assuming you have a job, all you'll need is an electric bicycle, your skateboard, a new pair of shoes, or a walker.   

2. Even if you want a road trip somewhere, a family vacation, don't expect to drive very far, your rented electric car has to be charged and there are few places to do this; your electric car doesn't have great mileage; expect the grid to have regular blackouts as it can't handle our increased demand for electricity. And in our cold winters your electric car loses 30 percent of its warmer weather mileage; you won’t be going far. 

 3. The government, and government funded school boards, will have final authority on important issues in your child's life. They see parents as the enemy of the new state they are creating. 

4.Justin has us in conflict with China and India. The conflict with India seems dubious; it is convenient that Justin has announced this latest crisis just when his popularity is at its lowest. As they say, "never waste a good crisis"; they also say: "if you don't have a crisis, invent one."

5. And there was the Emergency Act that was never needed. Covid mandates showed us the future that Justin Trudeau has in store for whoever doesn't follow his party line. 

6. Justin is a terrible manager of government, nothing is thought out in advance; if something fails he just spends his way out of the mess he's created. There are many examples of government incompetency under Justin. For example, our population is exploding, a million immigrants per year, the highest in the western world. Our population is now 40M, it will be 47M by 2030 and 50M by 2050. This is happening at a time when Canadians can’t find affordable housing and our hospitals are collapsing.

7. Visit any Food Banks lately? With inflation and our poor economy food banks will be a part of daily life.

8. Quebec controls immigration into Quebec, punitive language laws, provincial taxation, and Quebec is increasingly a separate political jurisdiction in Canada. The Federal Bill C-13 and Quebec's Bill 96 work in tandem to end the presence of the traditional English-speaking minority in Quebec. Justin doesn’t care whose rights he destroys.

9. Not feeling well, depressed, no money, homeless? Then maybe it's time to take advantage of doctor assisted death. Under Justin, many Canadians now see euthanasia as a solution to homelessness and poverty. 

10. Need a family doctor? Family doctors are increasingly a thing of the past; many Canadians don't have a family doctor, or they are losing their family doctor, or they can't find a new family doctor. 

This is the short list of how Justin has worked to destroy the country; there are other examples of Justin's vision of a future that is now being imposed on us. It is relentlessly dystopian, woke, and progressive.

I suggest that we need a "special rapporteur" to investigate the Justin Trudeau regime. We need a royal commission on Justin’s disastrous years in office so that they are not repeated.                                    

Crystal Ball, oh truth telling Crystal Ball, is this our Future?