A philosopher elsewhere (who does more formal work) writes:
[S]ince publicly available LLMs significantly reduce a lot of mechanical writing labor (great example: those who write in LaTeX needn’t spend hours and hours trying to code a complicated diagram, since even the medium-grade LLMs do it quickly and, with minimal back and forth, fairly accurately), and since publicly available LLMs also reduce a lot of literature searches, would it be a step forward to trim the standard PhD program from 5+1 period to either 3+1 or 4+1 (where the “+1” is offered in cases where extension is justified etc.)?
I guess my sense is that these LLM aids do not matter for most philosophy dissertations, but may help in some more formal areas–but one can’t tailor general program requirements to just a few subfields that might get an advantage from using an LLM. I should also say that part of the point of a literature survey is to read the literature and make sense of it yourself, and so an LLM might help in identifying literature, but that’s about it. What do readers think?




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