Thank god the humans did better than the computer. Otherwise my entire view of art, real-world experience, and the universe would have been shattered. AI might be able to generate passable advertising copy and high school term papers. But if it can ever achieve the impossible task set out by Dillon, which is basically to describe a beautiful and complex human experience in mere words, then we would need to totally reevaluate what it even means to be human and to have experiences. Although we probably should do that reevaluation anyway I suppose....
It can sometimes be difficult to assemble words that can exactly capture the emotional exhilarate euphoric freedom of flying on two wheels. Your previous examples come really close to defining the ineffable!
Thank god the humans did better than the computer. Otherwise my entire view of art, real-world experience, and the universe would have been shattered. AI might be able to generate passable advertising copy and high school term papers. But if it can ever achieve the impossible task set out by Dillon, which is basically to describe a beautiful and complex human experience in mere words, then we would need to totally reevaluate what it even means to be human and to have experiences. Although we probably should do that reevaluation anyway I suppose....
It can sometimes be difficult to assemble words that can exactly capture the emotional exhilarate euphoric freedom of flying on two wheels. Your previous examples come really close to defining the ineffable!
It’s like describing perfect guacamole. Human or AI words can’t come close to describing the pleasure. It’s the “MA” of a complete experience.