
Apropos of Sagar’s wish to foist the A.I. industry by its own petard, this article appeared in print in yesterday’s…
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Apropos of Sagar’s wish to foist the A.I. industry by its own petard, this article appeared in print in yesterday’s…
I teach both large courses, like Jurisprudence and Critical Legal Thinking (a.k.a Legal Argumentation), and small seminar-based courses at Edinburgh…
Surely there is an answer to the problem of AI cheating which averts the existential threat. . It’s not great,…
I’d like to pose a question. Let’s be pessimistic for the moment, and assume AI *does* destroy the university, at…
Hear hear
I agree with all of this. The threat is really that stark. The only solution is indeed in-class essay exams,…
I’m not sure I’d yet go so far as to call LLMs an existential threat to universities. But I do…

hmm…
I'm not sure that something can *lose* its identity and then regain it. But perhaps it can just briefly *shed* it?
I think there is also a distinctively aesthetic question at work here, related to the identity question but nonetheless separate. If the reassembled shed is identical with the original one, and the original one was not a work of art, as it presumably wasn't in Starling's case, what is it that has turned the final shed into a work of art? And if the original shed was also a work of art, perhaps in a scenario different from Starling's experiment in this respect, is the reassembled shed still not only the same shed, but also the same work of art (provided that its perceptible qualities are of course the same)?
The 'shed of Theseus' is funny – but the 'shed of Sisyphus' would be better…
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