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Culture War Roundup for the week of May 11, 2026

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If you take two pixel-by-pixel identical artworks, one made by a human and one made by an AI (or at least, the kinds of AI we have today, using the methods that today's AI systems use -- this isn't a simple chauvinism in favor of carbon over silicon as an underlying substrate), the AI image is simply worse, because (very briefly and roughly) human effort has intrinsic value, connecting with other humans has intrinsic value, the total historical and social context of an artwork has intrinsic value, etc. So it's perfectly fine for people to update their assessment of a given artwork when they learn more about its provenance.

This is a leap in logic that I see so often, and I don't quite get it. It almost seems so natural to them that they don't even notice it.

Because, given that human effort has intrinsic value, all context has intrinsic value, connecting with other humans has intrinsic value, etc. - which I subjectively agree with - it doesn't actually imply anything about the value of the artwork in question. Yes, effort has some ineffable intrinsic value - but, by no means, does that imbue the outcome of that effort with any value. Likewise with context.

In terms of human connection (and human effort as well, actually), pretty clearly any claims of some grid of pixels "connecting" the viewer to the placer can be applied just as easily to AI (of the modern sort, not scifi agentic AI) generated grids as to manually generated grids.