Tag: language

  • From metaphors on market day to metaphors we live by

    From metaphors on market day to metaphors we live by

    I was talking the other day with some people about AI metaphors. During that discussion the thorny question came up ‘what are metaphors anyway?’, followed by ‘is there anything in language that’s not metaphorical?’. This brought to mind a very old quote. In 1730 the grammarian and philosopher César Chesneau Du Marsais said: “I am…

  • Timelines we live in: A linguistic investigation

    Timelines we live in: A linguistic investigation

    At the beginning of the year, I was browsing my timeline on Bluesky* and came across sentences like this: “The absolute dumbest possible timeline. That’s what we live in.” “I know we all say ‘this is the stupidest timeline’ a lot but seriously this is the stupidest timeline”; “What a sh!tty-ass timeline to live in”;…

  • From sloppers to slopocalypse: The lexical productivity of AI slop

    From sloppers to slopocalypse: The lexical productivity of AI slop

    At the end of last year, I wrote a blog post in which I dissected the word ‘enshittification’, a staple of AI slang. At the beginning of this year, I want to do the same for enshittification’s conceptual friend ‘slop’, an indicator of what some call the slopification of AI. As the MIT Technology Review…

  • From symbolist poets to science communication: Exploring an invisible thread in my academic life

    From symbolist poets to science communication: Exploring an invisible thread in my academic life

    Years and years ago, I had an Academia profile in which I mentioned that when I began studying French literature in the mid-1970s I fell in love with Baudelaire and Rimbaud. I no longer have access to Academia, but somebody must have seen that sentence and recently sent me an email asking how I got…

  • Enshittification: A word for our times

    Enshittification: A word for our times

    On 9 October Jack Stilgoe posted a question on Bluesky: “Has Cory Doctorow done a piece on the enshittification of enshittification yet?” Ken Tindall replied: “The word enshittification has turned to shit but not through a process of enshittification.” This made me think. Is it true? Is there evidence for this? So, I started to…

  • Understanding computational hermeneutics: Making meaning between the past and the present

    Understanding computational hermeneutics: Making meaning between the past and the present

    A large group of scholars led by Cody Kommers and Drew Hemment at the Alan Turing Institute recently published a paper on ‘computational hermeneutics’. They mention Hans-Georg Gadamer and Wilhelm Dilthey, two godfathers of hermeneutics, and talk about situated meaning, ambiguity and the plurality of meaning. How intriguing, I thought. The paper brought back memories…

  • Superintelligence: From the divine to the digital and back again

    Superintelligence: From the divine to the digital and back again

    The word ‘superintelligence’ has been bandied about a bit recently, most prominently by Sam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI, who said in a blog post on 23 September, 2024: “This may turn out to be the most consequential fact about all of history so far. It is possible that we will have superintelligence in a…

  • Large language models, meaning and maths

    Large language models, meaning and maths

    I was reading an article in The Guardian about two novels by Benjamin Labatut. One novel, published in 2020, is entitled When We Cease to Understand the World and deals with quantum mechanics and war. The second novel The Maniac, published in 2023 and just out in paperback, is about John von Neumann, which brings…

  • Bridge or Barrier – Does generative AI contribute to more culturally inclusive higher education and research?

    Bridge or Barrier – Does generative AI contribute to more culturally inclusive higher education and research?

    This post by Dr Dimitrinka Atanasova was initially posted on the LSE Impact Blog on 4 May, 2023. It is cross-posted here with permission. Dr Dimitrinka Atanasova is a Lecturer in Intercultural Communication at Lancaster University. Her research focuses on health & science communication (particularly the topics of obesity, mental health, climate change, sustainability, nitrogen…

  • ‘It’s not a retoot is it?’ Moving between platforms and languages

    ‘It’s not a retoot is it?’ Moving between platforms and languages

    The question in the title was asked by Aris Katzourakis on Mastodon, the now well-known decentralized social network built on open web standards by a non-profit. In this little post I’ll tell the story of how I came to explore a new social world, including a new language. *** I joined Twitter about a decade…