Can Artificial Intelligence Produce Art?
New developments in computer programs have upset the arts. These programs allow people to give both visual and written input that, in turn, generate pictures. But is it art?
New developments in computer programs have upset the arts. These programs allow people to give both visual and written input that, in turn, generate pictures. But is it art?
Art and poetry are vouchsafed to us by God for the purpose of giving voice to all that cannot be said but about which it would be an impoverishment to remain silent.
The power and profundity of Kristen Lavransdatter has as its source the author’s profound understanding of the meaning of life.
Queen Elizabeth II was a witness to duty and service in an age that rejected those virtues.
Sam Harris mocked religion by asking “Where is Heaven?”, but his question is a good one that Christians should be prepared to answer.
It’s a brave new world out there right now, with all of these various attempts by people to recreate reality in their own image.
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The Waste Land by T.S. Eliot is probably the most influential poem of the twentieth century.
The relevance of C.S. Lewis’s Space Trilogy has grown more, not less, as the twenty-first century ushers in the “New Normal” and the “Great Reset.”
The new limitations on abortion access has moved Democrats to put the pressure back on men to get permanently sterilized.
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The diabolical underpinnings of rejecting nature is a connection we too often forget when confronting the transgender movement today.
People don’t rely on logic and evidence for most of the decisions they make; they follow the suggestions of their media, their tribe, and their appetites. This has led to a decline in Christianity.
The Man Who Was Thursday shows us the paradoxical truth that it takes a big man to know how small he is.