Alastair's Adversaria - Slop

Episode Date: June 22, 2026

This reflection was first published on the Anchored Argosy: https://argosy.substack.com/i/200059852/slop Follow my Substack, the Anchored Argosy at https://argosy.substack.com/. See my latest podcast...s at https://adversariapodcast.com/. If you have enjoyed my videos and podcasts, please tell your friends. If you are interested in supporting my videos and podcasts and my research more generally, please consider supporting my work on Patreon (www.patreon.com/zugzwanged), using my PayPal account (https://www.paypal.com/donate/?business=4WX77P4F8S7WL), or by buying books for my research on Amazon (www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/3…3O?ref_=wl_share). You can also listen to the audio of these episodes on iTunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/alastairs-adversaria/id1416351035.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 The following a reflection is entitled Slop. It was first published on the anchored Argosy. The term Slop, which many used to characterize AI, is worth considering. Slop is uniform, formless, tasteless food, produced in great quantity with low nutritional value designed for swift, mass delivery to, and consumption by large groups for whose specific members one holds no meaningful regard, and with whom one desires no sustained interaction. actions. Slop is typically served to animals, to prisoners, and to other institutionalised persons, to groups that are entirely dependent, to those who have no other choice or alternative,
Starting point is 00:00:41 and to those who have appetite but no taste. Slop has much less value when there are realistic alternatives on the menu, or a menu in the first place. Slop has caught on as a term to describe much of the AI-generated content that we encounter online, and increasingly also off. The term feels like an apt one to describe the deluge of bland, generic, uncanny, mindless, impersonal, and insubstantial content that is filling our feeds. The ease of production with AI has made it possible for lazy, untalented, thoughtless, uncaring and dishonest people to produce innumerable shallow semblances of things that might once have reliably indicated skill, thought and care. As our social and communicative spaces are flooded with such AI generations, the
Starting point is 00:01:30 humanity that we value in art and writing will steadily get substituted for by hollow simulations of it. Calling AI generations slop is a way of naming the adulteration that they involve, like a stealthy replacement of good food with a cheap substitute that does not taste entirely dissimilar, yet which lacks all the nutrients. Such content can sometimes appear indistinguishable from material thoughtfully and lovingly created by human beings, and those who produce it will often try to pass it off as such. The recognition that it is in fact slop often feels like an insult, like knowing that the friend that has invited you for a meal is trying to pass off a cheap microwave dish as something they laboured over themselves. While the quality of the food may be
Starting point is 00:02:15 inferior, the real issue is the lazy avoidance coupled with the deceptive pretense of the generous work of preparing a meal for you. Have they been forthright that they were serving microwave food, you might have been a bit disappointed that they did not go to more effort, but through the deception they desire the appreciation you would have given for a home-cooked dish. Some might say, yet it might all taste the same. And this is to badly miss the point. When people receive a personal message, enjoy a creation, or have a conversation, they feel some sense of being valued. Flooding our social communications and our realms of creation with empty semblances of these acts will have aggression's law like effect. De-based communications will drive out good.
Starting point is 00:03:00 A sense of mutually accorded dignity and trust is replaced with a sense of being used, and growing cynicism and suspicion. How do we know expectation of truly human communication to be betrayed? So much AI use would be of little value to us. It is only in the deceitful value it enjoys as it masquerades as human that it will be appreciated. Yet as it becomes pervasive, all communication will be diminished in value and distrusted. To use a food metaphor not unrelated to Slop, it is akin to ultra-processed foods, which may be engineered to be hyper-palatable,
Starting point is 00:03:35 to fool us that we are eating something different, and or to replace healthy and nutritious ingredients with cheaper substitutes. Such a product may successfully deceive many consumers that they are eating some quality and unprocessed food, yet this does not make it interchangeable with or substitutable for that food. Ingredients and the healthiness of processes of preparation matter immensely, which is why there are regulatory bodies to protect the public from the adulteration of their food. There are innumerable applications of AI, many of them worthwhile, chiefly in those areas where
Starting point is 00:04:10 they are most clearly distinguished from human beings, such as in predicting the structures of proteins or registering significant patterns in vast quantities of astronomical data. However, so many of its most prominent and popular uses, as they concern activities and creations that are more properly human, systemically encouraged deception of others and of the users themselves, corner-cutting, laziness, and disregard for others. When uses of AI substitute for or simulate communications with others, they encourage both neglect and pollution of our social commons, allowing the non-human to become ubiquitous in those areas where we most need to practice our shared humanity. As Proverbs chapter 18 verse 21 teachers, death and life are in the power of the tongue,
Starting point is 00:04:58 and those who love it will eat its fruits. Protecting the relationship between our words and human interiority from being simulated or adulterated should be a matter of grave social concern. This is a systemic problem, which cannot merely be dealt with by virtuous personal use. Like the use of performance-enhancing drugs and sports, it requires strict regulation along with in certain contexts, stigma and punishment. As in a sport afflicted by drug cheats, the integrity of entire realms of communication and social practice,
Starting point is 00:05:31 the university being a good example, depend upon ensuring that what we are engaged in is authentically and unadulteratedly human. When establishing and applying drug guidelines in sports, there will be complicated cases, substances and practices, which will require prudence and considered yet contestable, cause. Some practices may not technically cross the line of illegality, yet should be discouraged as contrary to the spirit of the activity. Different organisations will likely have slightly different rules.
Starting point is 00:06:04 However, many of the issues are society-wide, and the task of managing them cannot merely be given to private and voluntary organisations. People can often focus on edge cases and not consider the broader effects are weak standards, lowering the bar for some supposedly worthy instance. also admits a great many unworthy ones. They consider how they might function virtuously as individuals, but give little thought to population-wide tendencies within radically transformed incentive structures and environments. Or they regard new technologies as things that users can straightforwardly stand over against
Starting point is 00:06:41 without considering what facilities might be lost in persons formed by them. As Anton Barber K. recently observed, commenting upon the papal encyclical, magnific humanitas the encyclical does draw a categorical distinction between a i and human intelligence it assumes and defends our capacities for inner freedom responsibility and critical thought yet these capacities like our capacity for reason itself are not fully given in advance they are developed through specific media and ordinary practices some of which tend to establish attitudes of attention reverence care and insight and if it would be wrong to think that a human soul could be completely frittered away by distraction, we have also seen enough to realise that it can be deformed by practices that abridge or automate thought. Many think of technology as if merely additive, without considering its long-term ecological effects. For instance, few consider the way that the growing shadow of government upon our daily lives,
Starting point is 00:07:43 I here recall AJP Taylor's famous description of pre-1914 England is in large measure a result of modern technologies, often of war, techniques and systems that have subjected formerly largely self-regulating societies to disruptive forces beyond their effective control. Modern policing is down the road from the automobile. Immigration regimes need to develop to deal with the large-scale movements and dislocations of people
Starting point is 00:08:11 in a hyper-connected world. wrestling with the ways that mass movements of people can overwhelm localities and their capacities of self-regulation, many of which have operated by strong cultural norms and shared values, the strong customs, high trust, and reputational controls of stable intergenerational communities, reputational forces and other such things. Governments have long had to expand their scope to manage the transnational and international forces of a globalised economy and to enforce police and constrain interests of capital and aggrative systems of human action and communication that operate in vast networks that extend across the world and bring people under their sway.
Starting point is 00:08:55 For instance, when AI companies can wield power far exceeding many states, something needs to be done to protect the common good from being destroyed by their private interests. This, again, is not an entirely new phenomenon. At its height, the East India Company's private military was twice. the size of the standing british army unaccountable mercantile industrial technological and digital forces are not unprecedented the idea that the greatest threat is government can be very naive to such realities if no action is taken my suspicion is that a i and a i like content will become pervasive in popular culture with little to stop it and that it will drive out most quality human content increasingly entertainment produced for and by the general public will be largely AI produced, video and TV will be largely AI produced, music will be largely AI produced, advertisements will be largely AI produced, art will be largely AI produced,
Starting point is 00:09:56 most of the texts people encounter and produce will be AI produced. Because of its derivative character, even the human creations upstream of AI will feel debased by AI's constant semi-digested regurgitations of them. Because of the imitative character of creation, even the human creations of people surrounded by AI will themselves start to share its features. Increasingly, services delivered to the public will be AI, with AI taking the place of and simulating what were once human interactions. Value and humanity will be drained out at every step. The taste of many things may be the same, but the ingredients will have been completely altered. We will find ourselves living in the uncanny valley, and most people will not register the significance of the disaster that has befallen us.
Starting point is 00:10:45 It is already well underway, of course, and most do not care. AI could easily overwhelm the public education system, infecting every aspect of the learning process, demoralising students and teachers. It will break talent pipelines. It will hasten a general move to a post-literate culture, as people are denied the opportunity to gain a taste for something more substantial. The quiddity of the world can never be destroyed, but as presented to us it will be sapped, as the artifice, the replication, the disembodied, the virtual, the spectacle, and the simulation, take the place of the real, and then remake it in their image. Most people, having been raised on spectacle and slop, will have little sense of its
Starting point is 00:11:28 unhealthiness. An example of this is the way that real historical places can be reformed to look more like the hyperpalatable images that may well. once have been inspired by them. Medieval towns are refashioned to attract Instagram tourists raised on the artificial spectacles of Disney and Harry Potter, the confected image, steadily consuming and effacing the original. Now, again, as I have argued elsewhere, forms of slop and other AI-like creations have long been with us, nor was this phenomenon restricted to low culture. We have lots of impersonal and engineered boilerplate language in terms and conditions and advertising emails and other such documents, which, for their purpose, is often
Starting point is 00:12:13 not inappropriate. However, we also have academic texts filled with undigested ideological jargon. We have work that is mindlessly derivative, bland or sentimentalist, often cynically designed to spam or mash people's emotional and aesthetic receptors. Much of the work of someone like Thomas Kincaid, for instance, feels like a sort of AI slop avon-a-Latra, which while quite technically competent, is hyper palatable, generic, uncanny and insubstantial. We have websites filled with utterly formulaic articles optimized to attract eyes, often through non-human algorithms, to generate ad revenue. People producing such material have often complained about the constricting effect
Starting point is 00:12:56 that such production has had upon them, stifling their humanity in service of the imperatives of efficiency, rationalisation, monetisation and production. all these things have merely been waiting to be automated the values were already in place we were merely awaiting technologies to implement them at scale so much of the perceived gains of the past couple of centuries have been a result of conforming ourselves to rendering ourselves scrutable by modelling ourselves with identifying ourselves with the representations of, quantifying ourselves by, outsourcing our deliberation and agency onto, and submitting ourselves to manipulation by the machine and its logics. Our inability to consider and weigh the costs that accompanied these gains has much to do with the fact that they do not register within the machine's frames of value. When people have long been writing for the machine, it makes sense that they would want to offload that dehumanizing work onto AI,
Starting point is 00:13:55 getting the machine to write for them. So many of these activities are themselves results of a society that has already wholly submitted itself to a series of depersonalized, automated, standardized, and engineered imperatives and logics for the sake of maximization of productivity and exchange value.
Starting point is 00:14:14 AI merely permits these imperatives and logics to be thoroughgoing, spreading their control to realms that once felt their dominion much less keenly. For instance, universities have increasingly been perverted, by the imperatives of the market, their internal formative ends being subordinated to external ends of revenue maximisation, credentialism, careerism, and the like. The crisis of AI in the university is an amplification of the existing tensions that threaten the soul of the institution.
Starting point is 00:14:44 If university is really about credentialism, careerism, and networking, why not cheat on your academic work? If university is merely about research generation, why not outsource this? If this can be undertaken more effectively with much diminished human involvement, why not adopt AI wherever we can? Much of what we are concerned about relative to AI is the escalation of long existing logics and trends and the trophic cascades that these can cause in society and its institutions. Society and its institutions require some degree of ecological balance
Starting point is 00:15:19 and the uncontrolled implementation of a new set of technologies such as those named by AI can be catastrophic, collapsing whole ecosystems. Now that the generation of slop, mindless and or generic words can be automated on a mind-bogglingly immense scale, and with so much more ease than authentic words and creations, what was formerly an unpleasant yet more limited phenomenon, threatens society in general with a great uncannying. Our spam filters fail and our societal inbox is filled with unwanted garbage. Rather than manifestation of human beings falling short of vocations of speech and creation, we will be exposed to a myriad expressions of the non-human feigning humanity
Starting point is 00:16:05 and of human beings outsourcing their human expression to the non-human. When I shared some of these thoughts a few days ago, someone responded by suggesting that we replaced the term TV for AI and imagine ourselves back in 1955, what might we notice? This, it seems to me, is a very very very important. worthwhile experiment. Some people have a notion that those resisting the encroachments of AI are merely instinctively reacting against its novelty, perhaps animated by a constitutional dislike of change and undifferentiating prejudice against the new, or nostalgia for some fancied pre-technological
Starting point is 00:16:41 idyll from which we have fallen. It is helpful to recognise the strong continuities in technological criticism and how many of the strands of argument and consideration raised in response to AI. are applicable to and have been developed in relation to precursor technologies such as television. It is also important to appreciate that many of the people challenging many forms of AI adoption are wary of many very familiar technologies such as television and may even encourage more reflection upon and circumspection about our use of technologies that seem almost natural at this point, such as the printed book. What many of us are concerned about in AI is not merely assaulting.
Starting point is 00:17:24 leap of evolution beyond our existing form of techno-cultural society, but an accelerated, though incremental development of logics that are already endemic. Such technological criticism is not the same as an aversion to any novel technology, nor does it treat a technology's novelty as the primary criterion for our assessment of it. Some of our most formative technologies in the present are among the oldest technologies of all, things such as writing, the mirror, or money. Likewise, technological criticism need not entail a resistance to using new technologies, AI among them. The accusation of being a Luddite, besides generally being wielded by people with limited sense of the Luddite movement, is inaccurate in the sense that it is usually intended.
Starting point is 00:18:11 Our concern is that we use or determine not to use both new and familiar technologies in ways that are considered and discriminating, ordered by an understanding of such technologies, what they entail and how they frame and form our reality. Such an understanding is not merely an understanding of a technology on its own terms, the sort of understanding typically pursued by early adopters, but an understanding of, among other things, the ecological societal effects it has. It is interesting to revisit the criticism that responded to the screen age and to see how prescient much of it feels in relation to the internet, social media,
Starting point is 00:18:49 mobile devices and AI. From Walter Benjamin's the work of art in the age of mechanical reproduction and its recognition of the way that logics of creation and production transform our experience of things to Giedabors, the Society of the Spectacle, and its exploration of how representation and the image consume and efface a reality that once stood over against them, drawing all into a sort of show business. To Marshall McLuhan's, the medium is the massage.
Starting point is 00:19:17 De Niel Postman's amusing ourselves to death, with its discussion among many. other things of the trivializing effect of television to writings by Martin Heidegger, Jacques, Jean Baudrillard, and many others. It should be evident that AI is a further development and radicalization of techno-cultural logics that have been advancing dramatically over the past hundred years. The deeper logic and tendencies of these developments have long been recognized and presented as objects of concern and criticism. Critics of AI are standing on the shoulders of several giants of 20th century thought.
Starting point is 00:19:53 In our current contexts, with their growing tendency to fuse in a single common context of technological, mediated and specious hyper-reality, Susanna and I have spoken a lot about the need for something akin to the arts and crafts movement, a movement that maintains and pursues excellence in the face of the plummeting of standards for the sake of mass output, while seeking to make beautiful, good, human, and humanising creations available to everyone, We are also calling for a Christian humanism, as Tyler Austin Harper argued in a recent article in the Atlantic. Christians have conceptual resources with which to speak to realities such as AI that non-Christians, even when they have a growing unease with AI, typically lack.
Starting point is 00:20:39 Those who largely resist the move towards AI, yet do not merely retreat into elite enclaves, seeking rather to spread human creations to all, forming, defending and extending community. of virtue can really make a difference. And the church is, as Christians have long recognised, an arc amidst the deluge. This is where our work must focus. Thank you very much for listening. If you'd like to support my work here and elsewhere, you can do so using my Patreon or PayPal links below. God bless.

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