
released 4/17/2026
In this 2025 essay, “The Word Made Lifeless,” Talbot Brewer explores how language is fundamental to human being and to our telos. He argues that our understanding of the nature of words and their relationship to human nature is “teetering” due to artificial intelligence chatbot systems and large language models (LLMs). Contrary to what technocrat Sam Altman believes, we are not “stochastic parrots.” There is a real danger of reducing our human capacity — and gift — for participating in logos. We risk losing ourselves, our humanity, our lived experience of the power of language, and our ability to comprehend and reach toward the good. Brewer explains how the AI narrative is an inversion of the biblical creation story, and he questions whether tech-utopians have the right and the proper conception of human good to decide a future for all of humanity.
This essay is provided courtesy of The Hedgehog Review, where it was published in their Summer 2025 issue (read the original essay here). It is read by Ken Myers.
42 minutes
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