Murasaki's subjective perspective demonstrates that creative power lies in partial, biased viewpoints; AI threatens creativity when it seeks algorithmic neutrality instead of distinctive voice.
Murasaki Shikibu's narrative voice is deliberately unreliable—she observes through the lens of specific characters, competing desires, and her own cultural moment. This unreliability is not a weakness but the source of her creative power. The concept applies directly to AI and creativity: tools that attempt to eliminate bias or achieve perfect neutrality may actually diminish creativity. Human artists create by filtering experience through unique perspective, contradiction, and limitation. The threat emerges when AI is designed to smooth away these distinctive features in favor of universal appeal. Instead, the framework suggests using AI to help creators deepen their unreliable perspective—to lean into their particular obsessions, blind spots, and passions. Rather than asking AI to think like everyone, ask it to help you think more deeply like yourself, amplifying the specific vision that makes your creative voice irreplaceable.
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