Saturday, May 30, 2026

Shakespeare without Monkeys - AI / EZE, 2026

 

AI

The phrase "Shakespeare without Monkeys" references the Infinite Monkey Theorem to emphasize that true meaning, art, and intellectual breakthroughs require conscious human intent and creativity, rather than just random chance or raw computational output. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
It is used across various contexts—such as critiques of generative AI, philosophical debates on authorship, and statistical breakdowns—to contrast meaningful creation with brute-force randomness. [1, 2]

The Background: The Monkey Theorem
The Infinite Monkey Theorem is a famous probability thought experiment. It states that a monkey hitting random keys on a typewriter for an infinite amount of time will eventually, purely by accident, type out the complete works of William Shakespeare. [1, 2]
  • The Math: On an infinite timeline, even an event with an astronomically low probability becomes guaranteed to happen.
  • The Reality: A 2024 peer-reviewed study published in Franklin Open calculated that if you took the entire global population of chimpanzees and had them type for the entire lifespan of our universe, they still wouldn't come close to typing Shakespeare. The universe is simply too young and too finite for pure randomness to generate a masterpiece. [1, 2, 3, 4]
Core Meanings of "Shakespeare without Monkeys"
1. Human Intention vs. Random Generation
To have "Shakespeare without monkeys" means acknowledging that literature is not just a statistical combination of characters. It requires a conscious mind. Shakespeare's plays have value because of the human experience, emotion, and deliberate structural choices poured into them. Pure randomness can copy the text over infinity, but it cannot invent the narrative intention. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
2. The Critique of Generative AI
In modern tech discussions, the phrase is frequently used as a metaphor for Large Language Models (LLMs). [1]
  • The Monkey Approach: AI generates text by predicting the most probable next word based on massive datasets—essentially acting like a hyper-optimized version of the random-typing monkey. [1, 2]
  • The Shakespeare Approach: "Shakespeare without monkeys" argues that true genius or meaningful breakthroughs cannot be achieved merely by predicting words or scaling up computational power. It suggests that human-level art requires genuine understanding and consciousness, not just sophisticated data rearrangement. [1, 2, 3]
3. Real-World Constraints over Mathematical Infinity
Philosophically and scientifically, the phrase serves as a reminder to look at the constraints of our actual universe. While pure mathematics allows for abstract concepts like infinity, real-world creation operates under strict limitations of time, energy, and resources. True accomplishments must be achieved through direct human effort and ingenuity within those finite boundaries. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

Are you exploring this phrase in the context of Artificial Intelligence and machine learning, or are you looking at it from a literary and philosophical perspective? Knowing your focus can help me provide more specific examples.
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Encryption Asemics - Meaninglessness as a Central Condition of Information Theory - AI / EZE, 2026

AI

Encoding and encryption create asemic writing by stripping away the shared rules of language, leaving behind text that looks meaningful but contains no readable words.

Asemic writing is art or text with no specific semantic content. Here is how computational and cryptographic processes strip away meaning to create it. [1]
Encoding: Shifting the Visual Map
Encoding changes the format of data so different systems can read it. When applied to text, it breaks the visual link between letters and their symbols. [1, 2, 3]
  • Font and Character Mismatches: If a system uses the wrong decoding map (like reading UTF-8 data as Windows-1252), it generates mojibake. This displays as random strings of accented letters, blocks, and punctuation. [1]
  • Arbitrary Substitution: Mapping standard letters to non-linguistic symbols (like Wingdings or abstract geometric shapes) creates a visual script. It mimics the structure of sentences but lacks recognizable language.
  • Data Serialization: Converting images or audio into raw text strings (like Base64) results in dense, repetitive blocks of characters. These blocks look like an intentional, structured alien script.
Encryption: Destroying Pattern and Predictability [1, 2, 3]
Encryption hides the actual meaning of data by using mathematical algorithms to randomize it. This process removes the core structures that make language readable. [1, 2, 3, 4]
  • Frequency Flattening: Natural languages have predictable patterns, like the frequent use of the letter "E" in English. Encryption flattens this frequency, making every character appear with equal randomness. [1, 2, 3]
  • Ciphertext Visuals: Converting encrypted binary data directly into symbols creates a chaotic mix of punctuation, math symbols, and control characters. The result looks like human writing but lacks any syntax. [1, 2]
  • Avalanche Effect: In modern cryptography, changing a single letter in the input completely alters the entire output. This total disruption ensures that no root words or prefixes remain recognizable. [1, 2]
The Core Difference
  • Encoding changes the appearance or format. The underlying structure or grammar often remains intact, creating a readable but strange visual rhythm. [1, 2, 3, 4]
  • Encryption destroys the structure entirely. It leaves behind a chaotic, high-entropy field of symbols that resists any attempts at natural reading. [1, 2]
To explore this further, I can show you how to generate these scripts yourself. Let me know if you want to look at specific Python code to create your own asemic text, or if you want to see visual examples of historical encrypted manuscripts.

AI
The "meaninglessness" produced by encoding and encryption is the foundational assumption of information theory.
In his groundbreaking 1948 paper, "A Mathematical Theory of Communication," Claude Shannon explicitly stated that the semantic aspects of communication are irrelevant to the engineering problem. Information theory does not care what a message means; it only cares about the statistical rules required to transmit, compress, or hide it. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
1. Entropy as a Measure of Freedom
In information theory, information is defined as a measure of uncertainty or surprise, not meaning. This is quantified as Information Entropy (\(H\)). [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
  • Predictable Text: Standard human language is highly predictable. In English, if you see the letter "Q", the next letter is almost always "U". Because it is predictable, each letter carries very little "surprise" (low entropy). [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
  • Asemic/Encrypted Text: Perfect encryption removes all grammatical rules, patterns, and letter frequencies. Every possible character becomes equally likely to appear. [1, 2]
  • Maximum Information: Because an encrypted string is completely unpredictable, it achieves maximum entropy (\(H_{\max }\)). In the eyes of information theory, a completely "meaningless" scrambled string contains the maximum possible information density because every single character is a total surprise. [1]
2. Compression: Stripping Meaning to Save Space
Encoding processes use information theory to eliminate data redundancy, which inherently pushes text closer to looking like meaningless noise. [1]
  • Redundancy Removal: Human language is roughly 50% redundant. We can easily read a sentence with the vowels removed ("Ths s n xmple"). [1, 2, 3]
  • Optimal Encoding: Efficient data compression algorithms (like Huffman coding) compress data by stripping out this predictable linguistic padding. [1]
  • The Noise Limit: A perfectly compressed file contains absolutely zero patterns. If you try to read a fully compressed file as plain text, it appears as a chaotic, meaningless jumble of asemic characters. It only regains its meaning when decoded by the proper key or algorithm. [1, 2]
3. Encryption: Simulating Perfect Noise
In cryptography, the ultimate goal is to take a message with clear meaning and transform it into absolute statistical noise. [1, 2]
  • The One-Time Pad: Information theory proves that the only mathematically unbreakable encryption is the One-Time Pad. This method combines a plaintext message with a completely random key of equal length. [1]
  • True Randomness: The resulting ciphertext possesses no statistical patterns, no syntax, and no language structure. It is indistinguishable from pure, meaningless white noise. [1, 2, 3]
  • Meaninglessness as Security: If an adversary can find even a tiny shred of "meaning" or pattern (like a repeating letter), the encryption is flawed. Therefore, total visual and statistical meaninglessness is the gold standard of cryptographic security. [1]
4. Semantic Silence vs. Syntactic Noise
Information theory splits a message into two layers: the semantic (the human meaning) and the syntactic (the raw data tokens). [1, 2]
By using encoding and encryption to create asemic text, you are effectively separating these layers. You are forcing a system or an observer to look at the raw physical structure of data without the distraction of human language, which is exactly how information theory analyzes the universe.

Summary of Information States
Text Type [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]Statistical PatternsEntropy Level (\(H\))Meaning to HumansInformation Theory Value
Standard EnglishHighly predictable (High redundancy)LowHighLow density per character
Compressed/EncodedReduced patterns (Low redundancy)Medium-HighNone (Looks like mojibake)High density per character
Perfectly EncryptedZero patterns (Pure randomness)Maximum (\(H_{\max }\))None (Pure noise / Asemic)Maximum density per character

✅ Core Conclusion
Under information theory, meaninglessness is not a lack of information, but a lack of redundancy. The more a string of text looks like meaningless, random asemic noise, the more efficiently packed its underlying data actually is.
If you want to dive deeper into the mathematics behind this, I can show you how to calculate the exact information entropy of a standard sentence versus an encrypted one using Shannon's entropy formula. Would you like to see that calculation?
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