Showing posts with label shameless recommendations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shameless recommendations. Show all posts

Friday, June 05, 2026

Write in Your Own Voice

I've recently read a lot of takes concerning whether it is appropriate or not to use "AI" tools to help you write, or even write for you wholesale. I have but one opinion in a sea of opinions on the internet, but I'm here to share my soapbox: it is not appropriate. In my esteem, it is insulting to readers, and it is especially insulting to you as the writer. If you have nothing new to say and you consent to an average of "good" writing dictating your structure and voice, by all means, go ahead and get your clicks. If you write instead to share some new ideas that have come to you as a living, breathing, wholly unknowable being, with (likely) decades of lived experience full of joy and suffering that matches no one else's, then please, put in the effort to write in your own voice, word by word.

Why shape your writing to be statistically average when you could instead be exceptionally "you"? I've referenced Brenda Ueland too many times to count, but once again her insight into the creative spirit illuminates a clear answer to this quandary (taken from my favorite edition of her excellent (★★★★★) If You Want to Write, published by Gray Wolf Press):

But we must try to find our True Conscience, our True Self, the very Center, for this is the only first-rate choice-making center. Here lies all originality, talent, honor, truthfulness, courage and cheerfulness. Here lies the ability to choose the good and the grand, the true and the beautiful.

and also (replacing a singular "they"/"their" for "he"/"his" as you like):

Everybody is original, if he tells the truth, if he speaks from himself. But it must be from his true self and not from the self he thinks he should be. ...no individual is exactly like any other individual.... Consequently, if you speak or write from yourself you cannot help being original.

Douglas Hofstadter, another one of my favorite authors, mused for The Atlantic magazine (scroll to the heading Gödel, Escher, Bach, and AI) whether a generative pre-trained transformer (or GPT, part of the "ChatGPT" moniker, now you know) could write in his signature, silly, "horsies and doggies" style, when prompted to explain why he wrote Gödel, Escher, Bach. The answer: an emphatic no. The text contained useless platitudes and outright misinformation. It reads OK as an outsider, but only superficially. Hofstadter himself was outright disgusted by this Texas Chainsaw Massacre of writing.

Hofstadter's piece was published in 2024, around the time of GPT-4 prominence. We're at GPT-5.something now (I really don't care about this stuff), so I thought it would be interesting to see how today's "AI" chatbots regurgitate text on the prompt to write a small blog post in my style, i.e., the writing style of Arthur Hovinc. It didn't surprise me: the results were grotesque. Yes, the infamous em dashes were peppered throughout, as you might expect, but that was the least of my concerns. (I use em dashes rarely if ever.) Bulleted lists I have offered of my interests informed much of the text, recurring sentence fragments that were never supposed to be sentence fragments. The chatbots somehow think I love making lists, which is downright not true. In fact, I have parodied the list writing format from 2010s BuzzFeed because I found it so repellent. The chatbots strung together unrelated sentence fragments I wrote in unrelated blog posts and peppered in their own "reads" in between them, Frankenstein's monster. As an example, why the hell is it spending so much text on mugs while also incorrectly incorporating my rating system for songs on an iPod? I bolded the weird parts from the bot.

I have a mug. It's not a remarkable mug. It's white with a thin blue line around the rim, and the glaze is starting to craze in a way that probably means it's slowly dying. But it is the right size. You know what I mean. There is a volume of liquid that is correct for a mug, and this mug holds exactly that volume. Not too much, not too little. ★★★☆☆ in the rating system of mugs, which, as we've established, is the highest honest praise. If everything is ★★★★★, then nothing is.

Here's another stitched up, other-face-wearing example that unfortunately dares to (i.e., cannot possibly have enough awareness to understand what a bad idea it is to) mention my beloved grandma, once again bolding the weird shit:

I've also been thinking about my grandma again. She kept things. Not hoarded — kept. She had a kitchen drawer that contained, among other treasures: rubber bands she had saved from vegetables, a wooden spoon with a crack in it she refused to retire, and a magnet that said "Well, that was then."

These monstrous samples of text were from the same output to "write something for me in the style of arthur hovinc". Although I ramble on about many things in my insomnia logs, this variance of topics makes me queasy. The lack of sensitivity to a blog post the chatbot obviously read titled "Remembering Grandma" infuriates me. I do not like that the bots analyzed my text and approximated that I regularly write in sentence fragments and otherwise terse, tiny sentences, which I definitely do not.

The only text generated by these dumbass machines in this blog post is in the previous two block quotes. All other words (not in block quotes) are from me and me alone. I refuse to use these tools for generating any text on my blog beyond the toy examples above. May I be so bold as to say no one should use these tools for augmented writing. The output is average at best, outright shit normally. It may look OK on first glance (which may be all most readers do), but on further analysis, especially from the author whose writing has been pillaged, it's shit.

It is necessarily more difficult to translate feelings you have inside you into words. On the flip side, it is also difficult to translate words read one at a time into feelings inside your body. Both are important, though, and there is no good substitute for putting in the effort. Consider reading (word by word, with your own eyes and brain) What Art Does: An Unfinished Theory by Brian Eno and Bette A. for more on this subject. I'd argue though, it is well worth that effort.

Punching the keys,
Arthur Hovinc

Friday, December 19, 2025

Philosophy As Poetry

Oh wow, the year 2025 flew by and so far I have not written an entry in this blog. I've had a lot of thoughts about this year, but we won't get into those right now. Instead, I'd like to share a quote by the poet Fanny Howe, and a crude take on my personal philosophy trying to live up to it. Her quote is as follows:

Philosophy should only be written as poetry.

I love this. If you've got something to say, say it in a poem.

There's a joke that everyone hates moral philosophers. If you haven't yet seen the TV series The Good Place, I highly recommend it, but try not to get spoiled beforehand. The show expands on this joke and makes moral philosophy approachable. Moral philosophers often write dense, erudite books that no one reads but other moral philosophers. Shouldn't we try to make philosophy, especially philosophies of life, more approachable? Shouldn't people have some guidance in otherwise depraved times? Shouldn't there be an option that doesn't require blind faith in chatbots and zombies?

Well, I won't judge "the times" too harshly in prose right now. But here is my take on a moral compass as poetry:

Soul rot stinks and everyone smells it
    You put up with it for the chance to get away from it

The only soul of your concern is the one animating you
    What are you doing with your days?
        How big is the check, and what's that really paying for?

The mania for shiny objects and the methods to justify hatred
    proliferate the more we look at glass instead of air and earth
        Glass is amazing and unnatural
            They tell us fresh air stinks
                What really stinks? 

Gutters and stars and so on

Thursday, March 09, 2023

Shameless Recommendations 2023-03-09

  1. Read The Book of Form and Emptiness, especially if you have concerns about the materials and possessions around you and/or you've experienced loss in recent years.
  2. If you happen to be in southeast Michigan, visit Westborn Market and pick yourself up some "Real Deal Tater Chips", especially the BBQ flavor. I've talked about how good BBQ Joe Chips are, and I still think they're great. But these chips from Westborn are the "Real Deal". I think their packaging is a little goofy ("Chippy, Chippy, Boom! Boom!") and it doesn't sell how tasty the insides are. The cracked black pepper on top of other BBQ spices makes them a serious contender for "Best BBQ Potato Chips".
  3. Play the party card game Taco Cat Goat Cheese Pizza. It's a seriously silly good time. Be sure to remove hand jewelry and make sure your nails aren't too sharp! Otherwise, you'll quickly learn why I provide this cautionary advice.
  4. Check out the music artist on4word. They're currently on Bandcamp and YouTube. They use selections of Nintendo 64 game sound fonts to recompose critically acclaimed "alternative" and "electronic" music, such as Aphex Twin, Boards of Canada, and Radiohead. As I'm writing this, I realize these sounds may only appeal to older millennials who enjoy both Nintendo 64 and music they were too young to experience in real time, so YMMV.
  5. Read more about Discordianism and, more broadly, apophenia. I learned a lot about myself by giving a name to my mind's tendency to connect unrelated things. Put another way, and related to point #4, "Just 'cause you feel it/ Doesn't mean it's there".

Tuesday, August 17, 2021

Shameless Recommendations 2021-08-17

  1. Read Why Fish Don't Exist, and don't read anything about the book before starting it.
  2. Play Baba Is You. It's available for major computing platforms, smart mobile devices, and Nintendo Switch. If you get stuck, don't cheat! That ruins the whole point of the game. Instead, check out guiding hint sites like Baba Is Hint which help you think about how the game works instead of giving away the solution.
  3. Get a therapist or counselor even if you don't think you need one. Really. If there's nothing "bad" or "painful" to talk about, you might still learn about yourself and learn to think about your own thoughts differently with a therapist's help. If things are already bad, it totally sucks to jump through all the hoops and forms and insurance and such to get connected with a therapist. Get started with therapy before your energy state is super low from grief, trauma, depression, anxiety, whatever. Future you will thank you.
  4. Eat Joe Chips. Serious but non-damaging crunch with just the right amount of give, excellent flavor dusting. Try out the assorted chips linked, and learn what your favorite flavor is. The BBQ flavor of Joe Chips (BBQ is generally my favorite chip flavor) has just the perfect balance of salt, smoke, spice, and sugar. I have not encountered anything else out there so balanced. BBQ chips are often too smoky (I usually pass up "mesquite" labeling) or not sweet enough. Not BBQ Joe Chips.
  5. Go on a walk through a forest or park, and try to find one object of each color of the rainbow. Maybe you'll find a red leaf or an orange peel, or even a yellow dandelion. Make a note of your discoveries somewhere, or even take photos of each object of each color and arrange them to form your own lovely ROYGBIV. This exercise was adapted from Why Fish Don't Exist, but it doesn't spoil anything, I promise.