EgregiousJellybean
EgregiousJellybean t1_j1zm9n8 wrote
Reply to comment by Liwet_SJNC in [P] Can you distinguish AI-generated content from real art or literature? I made a little test! by Dicitur
Absolutely. You’ve articulated it much better than I could. I believe that good poetry needs meter (of some sort, though not as consistent as the Romantics’ adherence to meter or of course Shakespeare’s iambic pentameter).
EgregiousJellybean t1_j1xlsiu wrote
Reply to comment by Liwet_SJNC in [P] Can you distinguish AI-generated content from real art or literature? I made a little test! by Dicitur
Rhyme can be cheap. What critics (think Harold Bloom and the like) have widely agreed upon as good poetry often lacks rhyme.
EgregiousJellybean t1_j1xli1n wrote
Reply to [P] Can you distinguish AI-generated content from real art or literature? I made a little test! by Dicitur
GPT-3 is very bad at writing like the best authors of English literature. There’s a cheapness, a certain stiffness, and penchant for trite language to its prose. And it cannot emulate the prosody of Shakespeare or any of the greatest poets and authors (yet).
EgregiousJellybean t1_j15oxa0 wrote
Fractional max-pooling?
EgregiousJellybean t1_j1zzr5z wrote
Reply to comment by Liwet_SJNC in [P] Can you distinguish AI-generated content from real art or literature? I made a little test! by Dicitur
See, I love Eliot’s use of meter because he is very precisely economical with it; rather than consistent adherence to meter (like the great poets whom he viewed as his literary predecessors), he uses meter for effect. I haven’t read the waste land in a while, but I quite enjoyed Four Quartets in part due to his deliberate use of meter.