TY - JOUR
T1 - Augustine and the Posthuman Writer
T2 - Toward an Ambiguous Authorship in the Age of Artificial Intelligence
AU - Kamatović, Tamara
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2024.
PY - 2024/12/18
Y1 - 2024/12/18
N2 - This article explores emerging hybrid ontologies of the posthuman in the context of generative AI technologies and their impact on writing practices. We should regard arguments mobilizing fear of AI-assisted or -generated writing as based on misguided anxieties about the potentials of human creative acts and man/machine hybrid creations (what this article refers to as a model of “weak authorship”). A reading of St. Augustine’s Confessions, a key work in the Judeo-Christian tradition, shows how an early Christian humanist text can give us a model for understanding paternalist structures that place human authorship and human creators within a hierarchy of creation, where the transcendental and divine is identified as the highest source of creation, and where the “human creator” must seek legitimation and authorization from that higher power to create in the first place. The article explores creativity through the concept of ambiguity, speculating on the extent to which AI and human authorship might be combined and to what extent such hybrid forms might impact our understanding of human creativity. As generative technologies continue to be integrated into our lifeworld, we should develop a strong account of authorship that embraces the concept of ambiguity as a means of orienting ourselves toward a nondualist ontology of becoming.
AB - This article explores emerging hybrid ontologies of the posthuman in the context of generative AI technologies and their impact on writing practices. We should regard arguments mobilizing fear of AI-assisted or -generated writing as based on misguided anxieties about the potentials of human creative acts and man/machine hybrid creations (what this article refers to as a model of “weak authorship”). A reading of St. Augustine’s Confessions, a key work in the Judeo-Christian tradition, shows how an early Christian humanist text can give us a model for understanding paternalist structures that place human authorship and human creators within a hierarchy of creation, where the transcendental and divine is identified as the highest source of creation, and where the “human creator” must seek legitimation and authorization from that higher power to create in the first place. The article explores creativity through the concept of ambiguity, speculating on the extent to which AI and human authorship might be combined and to what extent such hybrid forms might impact our understanding of human creativity. As generative technologies continue to be integrated into our lifeworld, we should develop a strong account of authorship that embraces the concept of ambiguity as a means of orienting ourselves toward a nondualist ontology of becoming.
KW - ambiguity
KW - artificial intelligence
KW - augustine
KW - authorship
KW - writing
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85212755880&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.5325/jpoststud.8.1.0006
DO - 10.5325/jpoststud.8.1.0006
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85212755880
SN - 2472-4513
VL - 8
SP - 6
EP - 22
JO - Journal of Posthuman Studies
JF - Journal of Posthuman Studies
IS - 1
ER -