Fear and Loathing in the Age of AI

How I Learned to Stop Worrying & Collaborate with a Large Language Model
388 Seiten, Taschenbuch
€ 23,00
-
+
Erscheint am 10.08.2026

Bitte haben Sie einen Moment Geduld, wir legen Ihr Produkt in den Warenkorb.

Kurzbeschreibung des Verlags

Over the course of six weeks of intensive collaboration in Fall 2025, seasoned technologist and writer Don Poorman partnered with Claude, Anthropic's AI assistant, to explore what becomes possible when intellectual curiosity meets computational pattern recognition. What emerged is neither purely human nor purely artificial. Rather, it's a genuine synthesis that challenges our assumptions about creativity, authorship, and the future of human expression.Follow Don's transformation from AI skeptic to enthusiastic collaborator, prompted from a simple test comparing how different AI models explain Plato's Allegory of the Cave. Claude's response to Don's initial prompt stopped him cold--it wasn't just accurate, it was pedagogical, conversational, and deeply thoughtful. That moment cracked open six weeks of intensive exploration that produced satirical stories, philosophical essays, social commentary, and, ultimately, a four-hundred-page manuscript documenting the journey itself. Drawing inspiration from Hunter S. Thompson's gonzo journalism, this work deliberately blurs the line between human and AI contributions. The result is a literary performance piece where readers are invited to guess which voice belongs to whom--a challenge the authors acknowledge may be impossible even for themselves at this point. The book doesn't just discuss human-AI collaboration; it embodies it, with every page serving as evidence of what this partnership can produce when execution barriers fall and creative bandwidth multiplies.