AI and History

When technology advances gradually, we tend to not fully appreciate the scale of the transformation that it brings. This is because we adapt to its gradual changes, and lose track of how far those changes have moved us away from the place we were before the technology emerged.

I saw this clearly with the Internet and social media and the impact that it had on my profession, higher education. As that profession went through major transformations in the past 20 years, I repeatedly found my colleagues pointing to other factors (STEM, students being more “practical,” etc.), when the transformations that took place coincided precisely with the rise of the Internet, the emergence of cellphones and then social media, etc.

I can see this all happening again: both the incredible transformation that is taking place with the emergence of AI, and the inability of many people to see and acknowledge what is happening (although this time around, I think more people are actually getting it).

Therefore, I am writing posts on “AI and History” to document my observations over time, so that we can have a record of the radical transformation that AI is bringing, a transformation which it’s gradual advances can, like the Internet’s gradual advances, lead us to become easily accustomed to “the new normal” and not fully appreciate how radically our world is changing.

An Example of How Helpful LLMs are Becoming

I’m in the process of translating a fourteenth-century text, Wang Dayuan’s 1349 Brief Treatise on the Island Barbarians (Daoyi zhilue 島夷誌略), and I do this by putting passages in Grok, and then checking its translations. Today I was working on a section on “Jiaozhi,” the area of the Red River...

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How Digital-Age Scholarship is Different

All fields are different, but the field I am most active in now (looking at early Southeast Asia through Chinese sources) is very different today than it was just 10 years ago, and it is different because of the digitization of sources. This is something which I think people who...

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The Gradual Advance of AI

When technology advances gradually, we tend to not fully appreciate the scale of the transformation that it brings. This is because we adapt to its gradual changes, and lose track of how far those changes have moved us away from the place we were before the technology emerged. I saw...

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Infinitely Scrolling Through the Past

Last night I was looking through documents from British North Borneo and came across a record from 1886 about the murder the previous year in Palawan, then under Spanish rule, of a British subject by the name of J. W. Allen. In this document, we learn that Mr. Allen lived...

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Grokipedia and the Hồng Bàng Dynasty

On October 27, 2025, Elon Musk’s company xAI released the first version (version 0.1) of an alternative to Wikipedia, called Grokipedia. It appears that the creation of Grokipedia was the result of an offhand comment made at an event Musk participated in this past September, the All In Summit. At...

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James A. Anderson’s “The Dong World”: An AI Reading

A while ago I became aware that historian James A. Anderson has published a new book entitled The Dong World and Imperial China’s Southwest Silk Road: Trade, Security, and State Formation (UW Press), which is available in open access form here (https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/92971). I promptly downloaded it, and saved it in...

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They’re Coming!!

When I was working in the US, I never got an email from a predatory/scam journal. Then I went to work at a university in Southeast Asia, and I immediately started to get emails from such journals on a regular basis. I got the above email because I tried to...

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I Have Never Read “Orientalism”. . . But LLMs Can

I have been thinking about books and reading as we enter the AI/LLM age. There are a couple of books that were hugely influential when I was a graduate student in the 1990s: Edward Said’s Orientalism and Benedict Anderson’s Imagined Communities. These books were considered “essential reading.” Edward Said’s 1978...

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Vietnam has an AI Image Problem

A little over a year ago, I started learning about AI image generation. There are a lot of tools for creating AI images. Perhaps the most popular is Midjourney. You have to pay for Midjourney, but it produces very high-quality images without the need to know much about what you...

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History in the AI Age: A Self-Reflection

In the spring of 1994, during my first year of graduate school, I took a seminar on Chinese Intellectual History. In that seminar, in addition to weekly readings and discussions, we had to write and present a research paper. I chose to research a paper on “the Confucianization of Vietnam.”...

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