Honest question - how does any of this help someone become a better writer?
Just as I thought. It doesn't.
I shudder to think how Wuthering Heights would have turned out if Emily Brontë had had AI.
Sorry, Louanne, I missed this amongst the rest of the dialogue.
I can only speak from my own experience here, and obviously each users' intent in doing so is important. But I believe I have benefited from "discussing" my writing with AI, in the way one might with a beta reader or critique partner. Up to a point (which I'll come back to).
I don't use the thing to generate prose. But I have used it to review specific intent of my writing. I can drop some text into a chat and say,
here is what I'm trying to achieve, does it work? And not just for narrative, but also for style and tone and voice. Again, though, you have to direct it, be specific in what you are asking it to review, in order to get useful feedback. Which, may sometimes be the case for human reviewers as well.
The main advantage here is speed. I can drop some text, have a back and forth with the AI for a few minutes, go back and rewrite portions of the text, and repeat ad nauseam. I could get through in an hour with AI what might have taken days or weeks with human readers.
"But AI isn't as good as human readers!" I hear you proclaim.
Up to a point, it is
good enough.
I haven't been here for very long, really. I began with the notion that because I knew how to construct sentences properly, that I would be able to
write well. But learning narrative technique is an entirely different skillset. This approach has allowed me to compress a lot of learning these techniques into what felt like a considerably shorter timeframe than I would have without the AI assistance.
Does it give bad advice at times? Does it lead me astray? It assuredly does. But so may a poorly contrived human critique. And this too is a valuable learning experience - to know what
not to listen to.
I can feel that I may have reached a culmination point now, where the advice it gives is diminishing in it's helpfulness. Not because I have learned everything there is to learn, but because I have reached the limitations of the system. I am now writing things that the AI cannot understand, because of nuance and subtlety, and a lot of the feedback I get are things I already know.
So, there you have my opinion. Yes, AI
can help you become a better write. Up to a point. But you still need to put in the work, still need to think about what you're doing both in the writing and the review phases. It cannot do everything for you. And I hope I haven't just built my own witch-pyre in expounding all of this.