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Home Poetry Culture

‘Artificial Intelligence Versus Real Intelligence’: A Poem by Bruce Dale Wise

August 7, 2025
in Culture, Poetry
A A
9
poem/bryant/shakespeare

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Artificial “Intelligence” Versus Real Intelligence

Chat GPT “confuses” metaphors and similes.
It also “struggles” to correctly classify milled themes.
It does not “understand” the difference of proper nouns
and neologisms that it has “found.” It’s not “pro-found.”
It’s lacking “knowledge” and much “cultural significance.”
Without “emotional nuance,” it “dwells” in ignorance.
It cannot “comprehend” the realms of prose or poetry,
or “recognize” the slightest “feel” of real quality.
What chance does it have to “grasp” controversial verses, or
dark energy, star synergy, and th’ Universal More?

.

.

Bruce Dale Wise is a poet and former English teacher currently residing in Texas.

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Comments 9

  1. Roy Eugene Peterson says:
    4 months ago

    Having not attempted to use AI, I am heartened by your take on the subject with profound observations that ring true. I appreciate your insights and your poem.

    Reply
    • BDW says:
      4 months ago

      a few thoughts of AI Welder, “Cubes”:

      One of my favourite Modernist poems is that written by E. E. Cummings (1894-1962).

      pity this busy monster, manunkind,

      not. Progress is a comfortable disease:
      your victim (death and life safely beyond)

      plays with the bigness of his littleness
      — electrons deify one razorblade
      into a mountainrange; lenses extend
      unwish through curving wherewhen till unwish
      returns on its unself.
      A world of made
      is not a world of born — pity poor flesh

      and trees, poor stars and stones, but never this
      fine specimen of hypermagical

      ultraomnipotence. We doctors know

      a hopeless case if — listen: there’s a hell
      of a good universe next door; let’s go

      where he dealt with that exact heartening Mr. Peterson evinced. However, even though this poem remains for me one of the greatest sonnets of American literature, to pull all of its brilliant strands together to advance poetry written in English I have found a difficult task indeed. I “wish” AI could do this; but it can’t; and would undoubtedly fall flat on its main frame, if it tried.

      Reply
  2. Paul Freeman says:
    4 months ago

    Unfortunately all the AI guardrails mooted a couple of years ago have been forgotten in the rush for monetary gain and keeping up with the opposition AI companies.

    AI will get there eventually as it’s ‘training’ continues.

    All the AI aficionados claim AI will result in jobs, but when pushed on the subject can’t name what jobs.

    We often quote Orwell, usually about the thought police, but he foresaw songs and books being written by machines in ‘1984’, producing ‘prole feed’ to keep the masses content and subdued.

    Sorry I have some reels to watch…

    Thanks for the read, Bruce.

    Reply
  3. BDW says:
    4 months ago

    One of the reasons I appreciated Mr. Freeman’s “On Twenty Years of YouTube” is his recording of the origins of that particular tech. That is one of the tasks I want poetry to take on in this Golden Age, id est, to record anecdotes here and there in the New Millennium. As Mr. Freeman, Ms. Coats, and others, have utilized its musical videos, I have too. Psy’s “Gangnam” was just one of those entertaining reminders for me Mr. Freeman mentioned. At the moment one of my grandsons, particularly likes Southern gospel videos.

    But I use YouTube “prole feed” for so many things—international research, Chinese analysis, like “Lei’s Real Talk”, up-to-date news and political info, from a wide variety of interpreters, like Donald J. Trump, Francis, Darkins, David, Rogan, Owens, Shapiro, TBN Israel, some AI generated, irritating, but informed, videos, etc., US military analysis, health figures, like Berry, Ekberg, and E. Philipps, mathematics, chemistry, philosophy, physics, even Joshua Philipp’s “Crossroads”. Also, like commenter jd mentioned, I enjoy the movies, and DIY videos. Audio books are fantastic as well, fiction, nonfiction, history, poetry and prose from around the World, art, architecture, etc. But unlike cautious tech oligarchs, like Gates and Musk, I have no desire to slow AI advancement down for a One-World Government run by them and CCP operatives.

    Reply
  4. Margaret Coats says:
    3 months ago

    Bruce, I hope your use of YouTube includes occasional consultation of Max Tegmark, who puts forward plans on how we can control AI, and has the brains to do it. He’s been a hero of mine since I saw him explain that he’d been converted to the idea that human beings are significant in the universe (in the documentary movie “The Principle”). It is not surprising that AI may dominate those with the opposite view. There are way too many of them who think they’re only here at the tail end of 20 billion years of the last Big Bang, with no task but to battle for dominance among other peons of the same ilk.

    I like your poem, which makes many good points–the ones that need to be made. While AI can write poetry, you are quite correct that it has no comprehension of the poetic realm. It might, however, have as much capacity to grasp certain controversial verses as well as most of us beyond the controversial writers.

    Overall, you have a certain feel of real quality here!

    Reply
    • BDW says:
      3 months ago

      I know AI would not note that Ms. Coats’ “Together” was Words-worthian or Earthian, a fallen feather’s fluff. How could it note the falling off, the following last words, that break the stanza with pure anguish and remembered hurt? How could it understand such ambling, reassembling thoughts, that wander through such rhymes and meter to connect those dots…? Should baryon acoustic oscillations gather to admeasure Ms. Coats’ verbal pressures with a standard rule? How could AI mechanic’lly interpret heartfelt sounds, proceeding analytic’lly throughout her outer grounds? By heaven, I do think love for her brother is as rare, as any AI would belie with utter-ed false compare.

      Reply
      • Margaret Coats says:
        3 months ago

        Bruce, thank you for these many notices of subtle sounds and structure expressing feeling in my “Together” poem. You exemplify your points about AI with much appreciated compliments. Though I have been otherwise occupied for quite a while, I value them a great deal, and hope you will allow me, when I have leisure in the future, to place some of what you say here among the comments on that poem.

        Reply
  5. BDW says:
    3 months ago

    Go for it.

    Reply
  6. BDW says:
    2 months ago

    Can artificial intelligence compete with artificial ignorance?

    Reply

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