Artificial Intelligence (AI) as a Research Tool and Not a Writer: A Scholar's Sentiment By Ebi Robert

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Artificial Intelligence (AI) as a Research Tool and Not a Writer: A Scholar's Sentiment 


By Ebi Robert



A few days ago, I made a Facebook post where I said that a good writer cannot tell AI to write for him. My reason is that he cannot allow a machine to take his glory. Comments from some Facebook users obviously indicate that they didn't get the point I was driving at. I mean my every word. 



During the duel between Achilles and Hector in the Greek classic, Troy; Achilles showed his swinging and clashing skills as he always did in battle. With heavy strikes, he easily had Hector dashed his leg against a stone. That moment was perfect for the warrior's final blow, but Achilles drew back, saying that he wouldn't let a stone take his glory. This Greek analogy fits into my analysis, if you understand my sentiment.



You see, when I speak of a writer, I mean a writer, not a random dude who wants to put ink to paper and pass a test. I am talking that penman with the passion to ink on and on and on; tell a story, make an opinion, or maybe prove his hypothesis. I am talking about serious writing craft or business. Not a joke.
Personally, I see AI as a good invention if only it can be used well. AI versus humans is a matter of human intelligence versus artificial intelligence. It's that simple. Anything artificial is not considered real. That implies that the intelligence by AI is not real. Every creative work of art or literature, in the wider sense of the word (literature), is a property. Hence the term "intellectual property." No good writer would want to claim the property of a tool as his. That's an abomination. Firstly, that's stealing. Thievery. Secondly, it may be he is stealing an already stolen property, if you understand what I mean. Every writer wants to boast of his craftsmanship, his hard work, and how his creativity gave him an encouraging result. Writers have that pride. It's genuine.



Take it for free; AI makes one lazy. It has advanced the so-called practice of copy and paste—still laziness. It aids plagiarism, what some call intellectual theft.



Hear this story: one day, I met a student who had written an assignment. When I went through the work, I knew it wasn't his, but AI. I understand how AI works. I understand that they've got a pattern, that there is a way they work—there is also a way they write. I told him bluntly, "This is AI." He didn't argue. He said he also did the same assignment for his colleagues. Guess what? He simply duplicated the AI piece. On another occasion, I told someone to write a piece on a topic. A few minutes later, he said he was done. I said, HOW? I also asked, "I hope you didn't use AI." He didn't want to answer. I then told him to his face, "You used AI." And that's it. 



Many youngsters these days are not creative. They are not ready to go online to download articles and books, read them, understand the arguments, and write articles or works. They instead run to AI and shamelessly ask, Write me "A Love Letter To My Wife." 



For me as a researcher, I take AI as Google. I take it as a search engine, not a writer. So instead of asking AI to write, I use it to conduct research. I see it as a research tool. That way, you do the writing, but search for sources using AI tools. What you've done is maintain your originality. 



One day, I was conducting research work. I downloaded my materials. For my last research, I downloaded over a hundred papers, articles, and books. That's small though, because sometimes I go close to 500, if not more. On that occasion, I had done my own extensive reading. So I asked AI to tell me its own thoughts about one of the scholar's works I had studied. AI explained, but the explanation didn't quite suggest completely what I had read. I asked again: when the article was written. AI gave me a different date from the one on the material. I asked AI to tell me its thoughts about an other scholar's work. Guess what? AI gave me very wrong information. So you see! I knew AI was wrong because I knew the works, and I knew the works because I had done my own reading. 



Chat GPT is wise enough to even tell you that their information may be wrong. My sentiment, in all, is that, as a scholar and a researcher, I love my originality. I've got that jealousy, and I love it. I want my work to be mine. So I write them myself. AI is good. Use it as a research tool, not as your writer. When you use it as your writer, you don't only lose your originality and confidence; you may end up stealing a work already stolen. Watin I mean be say, AI thief the work, then you come thief am for AI hand. You can ask AI for any help, but definitely not to be your writer. I mean a WRITER.

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