"Cultural theory was right about the death of the author. It was just a few decades early" (article reflecting on the connection between LLMs, structuralism, and 20th-century cultural theory)
"Cultural theory was right about the death of the author. It was just a few decades early" (article reflecting on the connection between LLMs, structuralism, and 20th-century cultural theory)
Cultural theory was right about the death of the author. It was just a few decades early — Crooked Timber
That LLMs exist; that they are capable of forming coherent sentences in response to prompts; that they are in some genuine sense creative without intentionality, suggests that there is something importantly right about the arguments of structuralist linguistics. Language demonstrably can exist as a system independent of the humans who employ it, and exist generatively, so that it is capable of forming new combinations. [...] much of what we commonly attribute to individual cognition is in fact carried out through the systems of signs that structure our social lives.
Stanislaw Lem’s 1961 novel, Memoirs Found in a Bathtub
Unfortunately I’m unable to find an English translation of his full commentary.
Edit to add: I found a translation.
ELIZA had already shown us that just because a sentence is grammatically and semantically intelligible doesn’t necessarily mean there was any intentionality behind it, but people often assume so. Until recently, texts always had been written by humans, so it’s understandable that they might assume.