
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Adam Gopnik challenges the idea that the artistic and literary creations of artificial intelligence can match human endeavour. Although impressive in their ability to produce pastiche, he thinks AI programmes fail to produce anything 'newly memorable'.
'They are not smart at all in the sense that we usually mean it, capable of constructing creative ideas from scratch,' he writes.
'But rather they're sorts of cognitive scavengers with immense capacity - like whales scooping up all the shrimp and algae from the sea bed, and then churning on it, cud like, until asked to spit up one particular bit.'
Producer: Sheila Cook
By BBC Radio 44.6
7373 ratings
Adam Gopnik challenges the idea that the artistic and literary creations of artificial intelligence can match human endeavour. Although impressive in their ability to produce pastiche, he thinks AI programmes fail to produce anything 'newly memorable'.
'They are not smart at all in the sense that we usually mean it, capable of constructing creative ideas from scratch,' he writes.
'But rather they're sorts of cognitive scavengers with immense capacity - like whales scooping up all the shrimp and algae from the sea bed, and then churning on it, cud like, until asked to spit up one particular bit.'
Producer: Sheila Cook

7,913 Listeners

376 Listeners

863 Listeners

1,067 Listeners

159 Listeners

5,576 Listeners

1,808 Listeners

1,729 Listeners

1,018 Listeners

2,113 Listeners

1,952 Listeners

73 Listeners

756 Listeners

227 Listeners

43 Listeners

75 Listeners

745 Listeners

3,245 Listeners

779 Listeners

1,010 Listeners

3,858 Listeners

48 Listeners

579 Listeners