ArtsJournal: Arts, Culture, Ideas

IDEAS

Adam Gopnik And The Difference Between Knowing And Doing

“Activities that are interesting to read about (science experiments) are probably dull to do, while activities that are dull to read about (riding a bike) are interesting when you attempt them.” - Washington Post

The Fraud Of AI Generators

AI image and text generation is pure primitive accumulation: expropriation of labour from the many for the enrichment and advancement of a few Silicon Valley technology companies and their billionaire owners. - The Guardian

Why Siri And Alexa Lost Out To ChatGPT

“These products never worked in the past because we never had human-level dialogue capabilities. Now we do.” - The New York Times

Even Machine Brains Need Sleep

Artificial neural networks are prone to a troublesome glitch known, evocatively, as catastrophic forgetting. These seemingly tireless networks can keep learning tasks day and night. But sometimes, once a new task is learned, any recollection of an old task vanishes. - Nautilus

Can We Build Successful Cities Again That Aren’t Centered Around Cars?

A 17-acre, $170 million project that’s been an urbanist obsession since it was announced in late 2019, Culdesac is being watched closely as a test case for a new kind of car-free development. - Bloomberg

What If We’re Thinking About The Culture Of Climate Change All Wrong?

Much of the reluctance to do what climate change requires comes from the assumption that it means trading abundance for austerity. But what if it meant giving up things we’re well rid of, from deadly emissions to nagging feelings of doom and complicity in destruction? - Washington Post

AI Will Make Us Question Everything We Think Is True

The advancement of generative artificial intelligence is not an advancement toward artificial personhood for a simple, absolute reason: There is no falsifiable thesis of consciousness. You cannot find a researcher who can define, in a testable way, what consciousness is. - The Atlantic

Your Backstory Might Be Wrong. That’s A Problem

The evolutionary history of our species negates and overturns all previous cosmologies. Ever since Darwin, it seems most fiction writers have pretended not to notice and continue to cater to false backstories. - 3 Quarks Daily

How “Free Markets” Got Confused With Freedom

The so-called “Tripod of Freedom” — which positions free enterprise, along with civil liberties and democracy, as “one of the three great elements” in the American way of life — was an invention of the business lobby, one that was accompanied by abhorrence for any government involvement. - Washington Post

Closer And Closer: An Endless Loop Of Misinformation

Each day is bringing us a little bit closer to a kind of information-sphere disaster, in which bad actors weaponize large language models, distributing their ill-gotten gains through armies of ever more sophisticated bots. - The Atlantic

The Wins For Everything Everywhere All At Once Proves That The Academy Loves Conventional Movies

Sure, some of the sequences were a bit zany (and then there are the hot dog finers), but the film "feels more in line with last year’s winner, CODA, suggesting that pandemic-scarred academy voters are especially fond of cozily sentimental family dramas these days." - Los Angeles Times

The Real Laundromat At The Heart Of Oscar-Winning Everything Everywhere All At Once

Majers Coin Laundry in San Fernando is "tucked between an auto repair shop and a mobile home park, its tall glass windows revealing vending machines stocked with M&M’s and bleach." And for six fateful days in 2020, it turned into a film set. - Los Angeles Times

Where Bad Statistics Come From

And why they just keep chugging along. (For the record, no, you don'tlose 80 perncet of your body heat from your head.) - The Atlantic

The View Of The Oscars, But From The Tuxedo Shops Of LA

"Tuxedo vendors say that awards season drives huge sales on top of their usual income from weddings and proms, on the order of 20% to 30% of their annual revenue." But, from last-minute requests to late returns, it's not easy. - Los Angeles Times

The History Of Scientific Progress: Where Did It Advance?

For how long has science occurred outside the West? Is it fundamentally a Western export, a product of distinctly Western attitudes and values? - Boston Review

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