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A Pragmatic Guide to AI in Humanities

Documentation-Oriented AI Research Workflows

"It's not that we didn't think of letting AI operate computers — it just wasn't smart enough before. Now it is."


What This Guide Is

This is a pragmatic guide — every article is a hands-on task you can follow along with.

We won't spend much time on theory. Instead, you'll learn by doing:

TaskWhat you'll learn
Grammar CheckLet AI proofread your writing directly
Track ChangesSee exactly what AI modified using Git
Entity ExtractionPull structured data from historical texts
PDF AnnotationsExtract highlights and notes automatically
Knowledge BaseQuery your own research materials

Each task introduces concepts along the way. For deeper understanding, explore the reference sections.


How This Guide Is Organized

SectionWhat's there
ParadigmsThe big picture — why AI changes everything
Coding ToolsTerminal, editors, and other essentials
FormatsMarkdown and other document formats
VersioningGit and tracking changes
Talking to AIPrompting, agents, and instruction patterns
TasksHands-on tutorials
GlossaryQuick definitions

Start with a task, then dive into reference sections as needed.


Why This Guide Exists

Around fall 2024, something changed in how people work with AI.

Before: AI was a chat box. You copied text in, waited for a response, then copied the answer back out. You did most of the work; AI just gave you answers.

After: AI crossed the intelligence threshold. Modern models can now read your files, edit documents, run commands, and follow complex instructions.

You supervise; AI does most of the work.

This is the paradigm shift we're responding to. The old "copy-paste-wait" workflow is obsolete. This guide teaches the new way.


Who This Is For

Humanities scholars — historians, literary critics, philosophers — who are ready to move beyond basic "Chat with PDF" use cases.

You do not need to:

  • Be a programmer
  • Know Python (though you might learn some)
  • Have prior experience with AI tools

You do need:

  • A willingness to try new tools
  • Curiosity about how things work
  • About 30 minutes per article to follow along

Getting Started

  1. Read The Paradigm Shift — understand what changed
  2. Set up your Terminal — ~10 minutes
  3. Start the Grammar Check task — your first hands-on experience

What You'll Need

  • A computer (Mac, Windows, or Linux)
  • An internet connection
  • A text editor (we'll recommend one)
  • An AI subscription (Claude Pro recommended, ~$20/month)

We'll walk you through setting everything up.


This guide is part of the Lingnan Lab Digital History project.