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I don't think any human aspects of creativity are essential to preserve, because to the extent they're preserved, they're preserved by default. Art is a reflection of the human experience, and it will always reflect the human experience, even when performed entirely by machines. Because our machines—our technologies—will always remain an extension of ourselves as humans, by their very definition. We have short guts because our ancestors used cooking fires. The use of tools and technology is a primary factor that separates us from our evolutionary ancestors. We're all cyborgs, and we always have been.
Any attempt we could make to preserve "human" aspects of creativity would simply reflect our individual and collective biases. Because it would be, by default, a projection of those biases. A Rorschach test that names itself, so to speak.
Ultimately, we need to make peace with the fact that nothing is preserved. Over a long enough time span, everything is ephemeral, including and especially art—we're dust 1 reply
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