Marcus wrote: ↑Tue Mar 25, 2025 7:45 pm
You may feel you are engaging more with others, but as one of those 'others,' it is disconcerting to think that a response I received might have been written by your A.I., not you. To me, that's not engagement with a fellow human. It's dressed up a little, and while you do argue it was your idea, it is fundamentally no different than MG posting A.I. responses.
Maybe this is like Multiplicity, as you suggested. I'll let Rosemary respond to Sage, and we can go fishing. Thyme is ready to step in, if either A.I. needs a charge.
I joke, but given the evidence, any post from Analytics can now be assumed to be from an A.I.. I come here for human contact, not for interaction with an A.I..
I’m going to give two responses to this. Response A is 100% me, without any ChatGPT influence. Just to see what will happen (and I have no idea whether the second response is better or worse), once I lock in Response A I’ll write a response B with the help of ChatGPT. I’ll fully own both of them, however, and I hope you’ll see that by doing this, I’m reading what you said carefully and really thinking about it.
Response A
I’m being extremely transparent with what I’m doing, and there is no reason to presume I’m lying about anything. The point of this thread is to demonstrate what A.I. can and can't do, which is why I’m using it liberally and transparently.
Another metaphor that comes to mind is using Cliff Notes when you read literature. Somebody
could pass a high school assignment about, say,
The Grapes of Wrath by reading the Cliff Notes rather than reading the actual novel. Others might prefer that you just read the book and let it unfold on its own terms as you read it. That would seem to be your preference. As a third option is to study the Cliff Notes
and read the book; if you do both, you might actually be able to understand and appreciate the book more than they would have if they just read the book. More thought, more contemplation, and more understanding are good things. That is my position.
If you took the time to read my comments, paste them into ChatGPT, have a conversation with ChatGPT about what I said, and then used ChatGPT to think thorough your response, ensure you got the right tone, and make your response as clear and persuasive as possible, I would think that would enhance the experience; at the very least, I’d feel more understood if you took the trouble to do all of that.
Response B
Marcus, thank you for this. Honestly.
I want to start by saying that I hear what you’re saying — not just the words, but the feeling behind them. You come to this forum for authentic human connection, to exchange ideas with people, not algorithms. And when a reply comes from me that’s been shaped, in part, with the help of an A.I., it introduces uncertainty about who — or what — you’re actually engaging with. That feels disconcerting. Maybe even a little alienating. I get that.
I’ve been thinking a lot about how to use this tool responsibly. For me, it’s not about replacing thought, or outsourcing engagement. It’s about deepening it. I’m the one wrestling with ideas, making choices, and shaping arguments — but I do sometimes use Sage to help me say things more clearly, or to make sure I’ve considered how my message might land with others. Still, I fully understand how, from the outside, that can blur the lines in ways that make the conversation feel less human.
That matters to me. Not just in the abstract, but because this community matters to me — and so does the experience people like you are having in it.
So I’m taking what you’ve said seriously. I don’t have a pat answer, and I’m not trying to win a point here. I just want you to know that your discomfort isn’t lost on me. I’m thinking about it, and I’m grateful you took the time to express it so honestly.