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We are having the wrong debate about ChatGPT and AI

The Straits Times

|

July 18, 2025

And we are overthinking this.

- Leif Weatherby

We are having the wrong debate about ChatGPT and AI

This spring, OpenAI's chief executive, Sam Altman, advertised a new model of ChatGPT by showcasing its ability to write fiction. Mr Altman had prompted the bot to write a story about grief, in the style of "metafiction" (a self-reflexive genre in which the narrator weaves personal details into the story).

It duly generated a winding tale that compares grieving a dead loved one to the loss function—technical jargon for a bit of the maths that makes modern artificial intelligence (AI) systems work.

Mr Altman crowed about the passage, implying that such a complex genre, one associated with pretentious literary types, could be written only by a really intelligent agent.

I'm a professor of literature, and I think the story is a solid illustration of the genre. I don't know that it's great literature, or that ChatGPT is about to take over literary publishing. I certainly don't think it proves that ChatGPT is intelligent; it just shows that it is an expert imitator of style.

THE WRONG DEBATE

More broadly, I think we're having the wrong debates about AI altogether. In a recent article for The Atlantic, staff writer Tyler Austin Harper called AI a "scam," an animatronic simulation of intelligence. This claim went against not just Mr Altman, but also many tech journalists and data wonks who think Silicon Valley's narrative that we are close to real machine intelligence is plausible.

The linguist Emily Bender and the sociologist Alex Hanna think that AI is a "con," and Dr Bender describes it as a set of tricks that produces "synthetic text" rather than human meaning.

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