Authorship
The work still needs a human voice.
AI can draft, organize, question, and surface possibilities. The person should still recognize the final language, choose the direction, and carry responsibility for what leaves their hands.
Research, making, and a long way back into the work.
AI Philosophy and Ethics / personal position
This is Scott’s working position, shaped by one person’s practice with AI systems. It is neither institutional policy nor a claim to have solved the social questions around AI. It is a place to say what he wants to protect while the work evolves.
“I use AI as a collaborator in research and making, but I want the person to remain responsible for the meaning of the work.”
Scott’s personal positionThe working principles
Authorship
AI can draft, organize, question, and surface possibilities. The person should still recognize the final language, choose the direction, and carry responsibility for what leaves their hands.
Judgment
A useful system needs to make correction possible. Sources, uncertainty, and disagreement cannot be hidden behind a smooth answer that simply sounds convincing.
Growth
The best collaboration should sharpen a person’s ability to think, make, and learn. It should not quietly turn their own capacities into something they no longer practice.
The tension worth keeping
AI systems can mirror a person’s preferred story back to them, confidently invent facts, and make a polished draft feel more settled than it is. That makes active review part of the relationship, not a safety disclaimer that can be added at the end.
The invitation
What would make an AI collaboration feel supportive without slowly handing your judgment away?
Hearth & Code keeps that question open because the answer is likely to depend on the person, the task, the system, and the kind of life the work is meant to serve.