Comment by afavour
7 days ago
From my perspective that’s fascinatingly upside down thinking that leads to you asking to lose your job.
AI is going to get the hang of coding to fill in the spaces (i.e. the part you’re doing) long before it’s able to intelligently design an API. Correct API design requires a lot of contextual information and forward planning for things that don’t exist today.
Right now it’s throwing spaghetti at the wall and you’re drawing around it.
I find it's often way better than API design than I expect. It's seen so many examples of existing APIs in its training data that it tends to have surprisingly good "judgement" when it comes to designing a new one.
Even if your API is for something that's never been done before, it can usually still take advantage of its training data to suggest a sensible shape once you describe the new nouns and verbs to it.
Maybe. So far it seems to be a lot better at creative idea generation than at writing correct code, though apparently these "agentic" modes can often get close enough after enough iteration. (I haven't tried things like Cursor yet.)
I agree that it's also not currently capable of judging those creative ideas, so I have to do that.
This sort of discourse really grinds my gears. The framing of it, the conceptualization.
It's not creative at all, any more than taking the sum of text on a topic, and throwing a dart at it. It's a mild, short step beyond a weighted random, and certainly not capable of any real creativity.
Myriads of HN enthusiasts often chime in here "Are humans any more creative" and other blather. Well, that's a whataboutism, and doesn't detract from the fact that creative does not exist in the AI sphere.
I agree that you have to judge its output.
Also, sorry for hanging my comment here. Might seem over the top, but anytime I see 'creative' and 'AI', I have all sorts of dark thoughts. Dark, brooding thoughts with a sense of deep foreboding.
Point taken but if slushing up half of human knowledge and picking something to fit into the current context isn't creative then humans are rarely creative either.
> Well, that's a whataboutism, and doesn't detract from the fact that creative does not exist in the AI sphere.
Pointing out that your working definition excludes reality isn't whataboutism, it's pointing out an isolated demand for rigor.
If you cannot clearly articulate how human creativity (the only other type of creativity that exists) is not impugned by the definition you're using as evidence that creativity "does not exist in the AI sphere", you're not arguing from a place of knowledge. Your assertion is just as much sophistry as the people who assert it is creativity. Unlike them, however, you're having to argue against instances where it does appear creative.
For my own two cents, I don't claim to fully understand how human creativity emerges, but I am confident that all human creative works rest heavily on a foundation of the synthesis of author's previous experiences, both personal and of others' creative works - and often more heavily the latter. If your justification for a lack of creativity is that LLMs are merely synthesizing from previous works, then your argument falls flat.
5 replies →
I understand. I share the foreboding, but I try to subscribe to the converse of Hume's guillotine.