2022年之前的书籍
一位读者发现自己下意识更偏爱2022年及之前出版的书籍,尤其对不熟悉作者的近期作品会降低权重。他确信那些书中的每个字都经过人工输入、检查、编辑和校对,这种人力投入赋予书籍独特的价值感。尽管他经常使用大语言模型完成编程工作并认可其产出质量,但仍难以摆脱对人工创作努力的看重。他意识到这种心态可能类似前人担忧新技术“拉低社会水平”,但认为人类最终会适应并接纳这一新工具。
I noticed that I seem to, subconsciously, gravitate towards books published on or before 2022, and somewhat discount books published after, especially from authors I haven’t heard of.
A part of me tells me I shouldn’t feel this. I like and use LLMs often for coding work, and I know that they can create great results. And after all, if the result is good, who cares about what tool was used to create it?
When I read a pre-2022 book, I know that each word was typed in manually, checked manually, edited manually, proofread manually. That, somehow, has an effect on me, and leads me to give greater weight to the book and what’s said in it.
I don’t want to sound like those who “worried” about society being dumbed down by writing, printing, newspapers, radio, television, and then the Internet. I’d just be yelling at the clouds. But I can’t help but feel that the effort meant something.
I don’t know what the solution to this is, and there doesn’t have to be one. Perhaps we’ll get used to this new tool, and move on.