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by pbw
306 days ago
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Yes, GPT-5's response above was not shortening because there was nothing in the OP about Plato's Cave. I agree that Plato's cave analogy was confusing here. Here's a better one from GPT-5, which is deeply ironic: A New Yorker book review often does the opposite of mere shortening. The reviewer: * Places the book in a broader cultural, historical, or intellectual context. * Brings in other works—sometimes reviewing two or three books together. * Builds a thesis that connects them, so the review becomes a commentary on a whole idea-space, not just the book’s pages. This is exactly the kind of externalized, integrative thinking Jenson says LLMs lack. The New Yorker style uses the book as a jumping-off point for an argument; an LLM “shortening” is more like reading only the blurbs and rephrasing them. In Jenson’s framing, a human summary—like a rich, multi-book New Yorker review—operates on multiple layers: it compresses, but also expands meaning by bringing in outside information and weaving a narrative. The LLM’s output is more like a stripped-down plot synopsis—it can sound polished, but it isn’t about anything beyond what’s already in the text. |
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