Our_Lady_in_Twilight
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- May 13, 2025
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The outcome is the same. Content originally written can get changed. How does it matter if it's a human doing this or not? That flies against everything that people claim AI does. Changing content whether by a human or an algorithm is irrelevant. A good editor and proofreader can take an average piece of human slop to a great one. In fact, most good authors seem to be that way in a large part due to their editors. Not because of raw talent alone. In fact, most stories get pruned, redirected (changing the storyline itself) and redone by editors and proofreaders.
I'd say the opposite actually. The writers with the strongest reputations tend to have the most distinct voices - You can recognise a paragraph of Rowling, Tolkien or Clarke instantly. Its when you start dropping into the lower end shelf-fillers that the style begins to be flattened and homogenised. The sort of stuff you might pick up on sale, or if its got an especially catchy premise or smutty cover art, or whatever, but you quickly forget it.
Of course most of us aren't geniuses and will probably need to submit to a significant amount of editoral flattening in order to get published, but that doesn't mean writers aren't going to have mixed feelings about it. The phrase 'you have to learn to kill your darlings' is a widely shared cliche for a reason. You are negotiating your artistic vision with another person, and this discussion is heavily influenced by the realities of money, deadlines and the market; so its complicated and sensitive. That's why you do this sort of thing with someone you have a trustful working relationship with, over multiple rounds of meetings and email correspondence. Most writers wouldn't want to just submit their work to a stranger with a red pen and have it blindly cut to formula.
Even then, a writer on the level of publication has already found their voice, their distinct way of expressing their style. Even if they'll defer at times to the publisher, both parties have the experience and human understanding to push back, to engage in dialogue to explore how they can best express the emotions, themes and tone that they as a writer are trying to achieve.
An AI isn't able to do that. It isn't even an AI in any meaningful sense, it's just a pattern recognition model. It doesn't understand your emotional beats, your themes or characters, nor does it know how to use the craft of writing to best express that stuff, much less in your individual voice - it's just looking at a piece of text and making it conform to statistical patterns. Almost by definition you are applying an algorithm to sand off anything unique and make your work as bland as possible. And like I say, as you get more granular and 'correctable' like with spellchecking, that has more value, but as you zoom out, you quickly lose the sense of what is making the work your own. As a writer you'll never find and develop your voice, and as a reader you'll never find anything other than flavourless junk food, fine for quick binges but fundementally forgettable.
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