Published Online:December 2025
Product Name:The IUP Journal of Information Technology
Product Type:Article
Product Code:IJIT021225
DOI:10.71329/IUPJIT/2025.21.4.19-39
Author Name:Arman Shaikh R
Availability:YES
Subject/Domain:Engineering
Download Format:PDF
Pages:19-39
Philosophical writing is not merely a formal arrangement of language but an expressive act rooted in lived experience, reflective consciousness, and emotional intentionality. This paper critically examines whether artificial intelligence (AI)-based text generation systems can meaningfully participate in philosophical creativity or primarily simulate surface-level linguistic patterns without experiential grounding. Adopting a conceptual and analytical research approach, the study examines the limitations of AI-generated philosophical texts, particularly in relation to emotional depth and meaning construction. The analysis further explores the implications of increasing dependence on AI-assisted writing tools, arguing that the pursuit of algorithmically “perfect” expression risks diluting creative struggle and emotional engagement. It employs a conceptual, analytical, and illustrative approach. The paper concludes that while AI serves as a valuable assistive technology in philosophical writing, the essence of philosophical creativity, grounded in human experience and emotional authenticity remains fundamentally irreducible to computational processes.
The rapid advancement of artificial intelligence (AI), particularly in the field of natural language processing (NLP), has significantly transformed the landscape of written communication (Floridi & Chiriatti, 2020; McCarthy, 2007).