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Language Machines: Cultural AI and the End of Remainder Humanism: Posthumanities, cartea 74

Autor Leif Weatherby
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 24 iun 2025
How generative AI systems capture a core function of language
Looking at the emergence of generative AI, Language Machines presents a new theory of meaning in language and computation, arguing that humanistic scholarship misconstrues how large language models (LLMs) function. Seeing LLMs as a convergence of computation and language, Leif Weatherby contends that AI does not simulate cognition, as widely believed, but rather creates culture. This evolution in language, he finds, is one that we are ill-prepared to evaluate, as what he terms “remainder humanism” counterproductively divides the human from the machine without drawing on established theories of representation that include both.
 
To determine the consequences of using AI for language generation, Weatherby reads linguistic theory in conjunction with the algorithmic architecture of LLMs. He finds that generative AI captures the ways in which language is at first complex, cultural, and poetic, and only later referential, functional, and cognitive. This process is the semiotic hinge on which an emergent AI culture depends. Weatherby calls for a “general poetics” of computational cultural forms under the formal conditions of the algorithmic reproducibility of language.
 
Locating the output of LLMs on a spectrum from poetry to ideology, Language Machines concludes that literary theory must be the backbone of a new rhetorical training for our linguistic-computational culture.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781517919320
ISBN-10: 1517919320
Pagini: 264
Ilustrații: 17 black and white illustrations
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Editura: University of Minnesota Press
Colecția Univ Of Minnesota Press
Seria Posthumanities


Notă biografică

Leif Weatherby is associate professor of German and founding director of the Digital Theory Lab at New York University. He is author of Transplanting the Metaphysical Organ: German Romanticism between Leibniz and Marx.

Cuprins

Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: AI between Cognition and Culture
1. How the Humanities Lost Language: Syntax, Statistics, and Structure
2. The Eliza Effect Goes Global: Intelligence as Simulacrum
3. The Semiological Surround, or How Language Is the Medium of Computation
4. Large Literary Machines
5. Computational Meaning: For a General Poetics
6. Poetic Ideology: The Packaged Semantics of Generative Culture
Conclusion: Language as a Service, or the Return of Rhetoric
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Recenzii

"Language Machines takes the success of generative AI as an opportunity to rethink fundamental questions about the relationship of language to referentiality and of culture to cognition. Leif Weatherby confronts these questions boldly and argues persuasively that avoiding them leads to what he calls ‘remainder humanism’—a defensive insistence on a human essence defined as the shrinking negative space left by technology."—Ted Underwood, author of Distant Horizons: Digital Evidence and Literary Change
"Leif Weatherby reveals a rift in the humanities, torn open by the cultural technology of generative AI: we have no theory for what AI is doing to language. Meticulously mining structuralism, computation, poetics, and labor history, he constructs much-needed theory to account for the matrix of culture and language in which AI is embedded—and which it increasingly now creates."—Annette Vee, author of Coding Literacy: How Computer Programming Is Changing Writing
"Language Machines is by some distance the most intellectually stimulating and original book on large language models and their kin that I have read."—Programmable Mutter
"A blaring wake-up call on what’s necessary to understand contemporary scientific developments in both linguistics and artificial intelligence."—Pre-History of an Encounter
"The most important book about LLMs that currently exists."—Mark Carrigan, Senior Lecturer in Education at the University of Manchester
"Groundbreaking."—John Naughton, The Observer