Perhaps.
I like the idea that a piece of art, in addition of ultimately ending up as pixels on my screen, is also a window into a world that has been dreamt up by real human imagination, driven by their hopes and fears.
Semiconductors based generation may give me the first part, but not the second.
I'm speaking for myself here, I agree with your point though.
> I like the idea that a piece of art, in addition of ultimately ending up as pixels on my screen, is also a window into a world that has been dreamt up by real human imagination, driven by their hopes and fears.
I guess this actually defines the fringe between ai-art enjoyers and haters - some people prefer what art does to their imagination, while others look at what art does to others'
You just refuse to see certain people’s hopes and fears because they didn’t express them in a way you personally find pleasing.
The LLMs didn’t prompt themselves.
> The LLMs didn’t prompt themselves.
I refuse to accept that real humans believe prompting is art.