Posts

When the Machines Learn to Paint: AI, Copyright, and the Future of Culture

Image
For centuries we assumed art was the last thing machines would learn to do. Every generation believes it is living through unprecedented technological change. Yet every once in a while something arrives that genuinely forces us to reconsider how culture itself is created. Artificial intelligence may be one of those moments. In the past two years we have watched AI systems learn to write stories, compose music, generate paintings, animate characters, and produce short films. Some of the results are still awkward. Hands occasionally have six fingers. Plots sometimes wander into nonsense. But the trajectory is clear enough to raise a deeper question: if machines can create culture, what happens to the human systems that built culture in the first place? The debate currently unfolding around AI, copyright, and artistic creation sits at the intersection of three powerful forces: technological capability, legal frameworks designed for a different era, and our intuitive belief that human crea...

Legion: Skin Deep — Identity, Dialogue, and the Shape of a Mind

Image
Brandon Sanderson’s Legion: Skin Deep returns to Stephen Leeds in a way that feels immediately familiar—perhaps intentionally so. Like the earlier novellas, Legion and Legion: Death & Faxes , this is not a story that leans heavily on long-form progression. Instead, it operates in a contained space: a new case, a new problem, and the same underlying question that has always defined the series—what does it mean to rely on a mind that is not entirely your own? That structure can feel limiting if you expect escalation. But it also gives the series a particular clarity. A Case About Identity—With Edges At its core, Skin Deep begins with a missing body—and the question of what that disappearance might imply. Stephen Leeds is brought in to investigate a case that quickly moves beyond a standard recovery. The circumstances suggest that whatever has been lost is not just physical, but tied to something more abstract—information, identity, and the possibility that the two are no...

Rome and the Illusion of Empire

Image
Rome has a way of resurfacing when you’re not looking for it. Not just in history books, but in places where it doesn’t quite belong at first glance. In science fiction empires that span galaxies. In fantasy legions marching under unfamiliar banners. In systems that feel vast, ordered, and strangely permanent. I have felt that pull for as long as I can remember. As a child reading Asterix , I was supposed to root for the unruly Gauls. But I often found myself staring instead at the Roman camps: the straight lines of tents, the palisades, the almost hypnotic order of it all. Later, much later, I remember watching lectures about the Roman grain economy—how food moved across the Mediterranean at scale, how the city of Rome itself depended on invisible systems of logistics and administration. That was probably the moment it clicked. Rome was not just an army or a culture. It was a machine for stability . From a distance, the system looks permanent. And once you start seeing that, you be...

The Assassins of Thasalon by Lois McMaster Bujold — When Small Stories Start to Add Up

Image
Long-running novella series can easily start to feel insubstantial. Self-contained, pleasant, forgettable. The Assassins of Thasalon avoids that trap. If anything, it makes the opposite case: that short, tightly constructed stories can gather weight over time without ever needing to announce that ambition too loudly. A Quiet Return, With Complications The setup is deceptively simple. Penric, sorcerer, physician, and frequent magnet for complications, is drawn into a mission connected to a failed assassination attempt and the long-shadowed history of Thasalon. What begins as investigation gradually turns into something more layered: part political entanglement, part moral problem with no especially clean edges. Bujold keeps the scope controlled. There is no need for grand battles or an inflated cast assembled just to create the impression of scale. Instead, the novella moves with precision. Each development adds pressure, and each answer has a way of making the situation more compli...

When the Mask Becomes the Self: Identity and Impersonation in Fiction

Image
If everyone believes you are someone else, at what point does it stop being a disguise? Stories built around impersonation often begin with a practical problem. A king is missing. A fortune must be accessed. A plan requires someone to take another person’s place, convincingly and quickly. The premise is simple: resemble the original closely enough, learn the necessary details, and maintain the performance. At first, identity in these stories appears surprisingly fragile. It depends less on who someone is than on whether others accept the role they are playing. But the longer the performance lasts, the more complicated that assumption becomes. What begins as something external—something worn like a costume—has a tendency to move inward. The role reshapes the person performing it. Becoming the Other Person In its most classical form, the impersonation story is almost clean in its logic. In The Prisoner of Zenda , an Englishman is persuaded to impersonate a kidnapped king. The success ...

What We Learned from Ukraine—and Why It May Not Matter

Image
For decades, global supply chains have been optimized for efficiency. Inventory minimized, production concentrated, redundancy stripped out wherever possible. It is a system designed to work smoothly under normal conditions—and it often does. Until it doesn’t. The Trade-Off We Understand There is a persistent idea that systems can be optimized either for efficiency or for robustness, but not both. That is too simplistic. In practice, systems sit somewhere in between. But the trade-off is real. Every buffer removed improves margins. Every dependency consolidated reduces cost. And each of those choices makes the system a little less able to absorb shocks. The question is not whether we understand this. It is whether we can act on it. Recent tensions around the Strait of Hormuz bring that question back into focus. A narrow passage carries a disproportionate share of global energy flows. It is efficient. It is not particularly robust. And like many such chokepoints, its risk is e...

If AI Can Create New Knowledge, Why Do We Still Need Humans?

Image
Recent AI systems have started to produce outputs that do not merely rearrange familiar material, but appear to push beyond it. In mathematics, there are already examples—early, limited, but real—where models help uncover structures or solution paths that had resisted human attention for years. In creative fields, the same pattern shows up in a different form: not just imitation, but variation that feels genuinely new. That raises an obvious question. If AI can produce novel content, why worry about running out of training data? At that point, wouldn’t the system become at least partly self-sustaining? It is an appealing idea. It also turns out to be less straightforward than it first appears. The Fear Was Never About Running Out of Text The weakest version of this debate is easy to dismiss. The internet is not about to run out of words, images, or videos. And even if human-generated material became a smaller share of what is published online, AI could simply generate more. B...