LLMs and image generation models make it even more difficult for artists and thinkers, who are already in a precarious situation, to make a living from their work. This is not a recent development, as evidenced by the fact that they have been referred to indiscriminately as merely content producers for decades, which gives the loss of value of their important work a telling name even in today’s logic.
This professional group has not received adequate financial recognition for its work, - tbh they never did - but their situation has become way worse since the advent of the World Wide Web.
Still: Today’s technology in the form of so-called AI intensives this problem to an unprecedented degree.
So: Have we reached the end of culture and are we now entering an age of absolute dullness in which there can no longer be a critical spirit, but only amateurish work and industrially mass-produced corporate views? All that however far removed from the craftsmanship that has so significantly shaped the culture of all civilizations throughout the world’s history for so long?


I’m pretty sure most people with a bit of education could name philosophers like Aristotle, Plato, Socrates, Marx, Nietzsche and Kant. And especially in case of political philosophers like Marx, people sure seem to have paid attention to him.
Sorry to bust your bubble, but most people don’t have a college education. In the USA, the average reading level is below middle school.
https://www.snopes.com/news/2022/08/02/us-literacy-rate/
In the UK, about 20% of the population is considered functionally illiterate.
And even of those who do, how many actually took a philosophy class? And of those who passed, how many have read a philosophy book in the past year?
And quartz, of course.