Is It Wrong to Write a Book with A.I.? Let Me Confess Before You Cancel Me
I wrote a book with A.I. There, I said it. No PR team, no apology video filmed in front of a bookshelf I haven’t read, no carefully curated “journey” thread about how I found my voice after six months of journaling and herbal tea. I sat down, opened a machine that doesn’t sleep, and said, “Help me write something people might actually finish.” And it did. Now, apparently, this makes me either a visionary or a literary criminal. The internet—judge, jury, and permanently outraged neighbor—has decided that using A.I. to write a book is either the future of storytelling or the creative equivalent of showing up to a marathon on a Segway. And since I am now both the runner and the guy on wheels, I feel uniquely qualified to say something deeply inconvenient: Everyone arguing about this is missing the point. The Fantasy of the Sacred Author Let’s start with the mythology we’re all pretending is real. Writers, we’re told, are these fragile, tortured vessels of originality. They sit al...