The Calculation of Meaning, Or Doing Words Without Things
Mercedes Bunz (Digital Culture & Society, King's College London) will deliver a lecture on LLMs through the perspective of literary theory and language philosophy.
Inspired by Michael Riffaterre’s ‘Fictional Truth’ and his take on ‘intertextuality’, this talk brings computational mechanisms of the first generation of LLMs using the transformer architecture in conversation with literary and philosophical theories of language to show that their calculation of meaning sits fundamentally differently in our world than the language produced through communication of meaning, even though on the surface both might look alike. Given the well-known fact that LLMs calculate meaning from distributed semantics, i.e., from analyzing form alone, bare of any relation to the outside world and its things, the article turns to the particular role of things in communicated language (fiction & non-fiction) as discussed for literature by Bill Brown and for language philosophy by Hilary Putnam. Reading their different takes together allows to see that the language used in the communication of meaning is calibrated rather differently than the language used when calculating meaning, and that LLMs’ generated writing is a new and different mode of production with its own and different strengths, capabilities, concerns, and needs for care when making meaning.
This talk is sponsored by the Office of the Provost.
