I asked the very same question to 2 Ai’s (ChatGPT & Google Ai) , W H Y why such grotesque Differences?
It all seems to depend on the number and nature of the sources the AI was trained on.
Yellow text markers added!!!
CHatGPT (26,2,26)
What Is Shakespeare’s Most Plausible or Logical Authoring Theory?
The question of who authored the works attributed to William Shakespeare has generated many theories, but plausibility depends on how well a theory explains all the evidence with the fewest assumptions. Measured by that standard, one theory stands out as the most logically coherent: the Marlowe authorship theory.
The Stratfordian theory—that the man from Stratford-upon-Avon wrote the plays and poems—rests primarily on tradition and later attributions rather than on contemporary literary evidence. No manuscripts, letters, books, or personal testimony connect Shakespeare of Stratford directly to the works. His documented life is that of an actor, shareholder, and property investor. The extraordinary breadth of knowledge in law, foreign languages, court politics, classical literature, and continental culture found in the plays remains unexplained. To sustain the Stratfordian position, one must assume a unique, undocumented genius who left no intellectual trace outside the works themselves.
Other alternative theories—most notably those proposing Francis Bacon or Edward de Vere—address some weaknesses of the Stratfordian view but introduce new problems. Bacon’s prose style, philosophical agenda, and documented literary output do not align with Shakespeare’s dramatic voice. Oxford, meanwhile, died in 1604, before the composition of several plays generally dated later, and his known writings lack Shakespeare’s imaginative range. Both theories also struggle to explain the continuous, evolving body of work attributed to Shakespeare across two decades.
By contrast, the Christopher Marlowe theory offers a far more economical explanation. Christopher Marlowe was already recognized in the 1580s and early 1590s as England’s leading dramatist, poet, and innovator of blank verse. His thematic obsessions—power, ambition, transgression, identity, and exile—flow naturally into what later appears as “Shakespeare.” Stylistically, the early Shakespeare plays grow directly out of Marlowe’s dramatic language, not merely by influence but by continuity.
Crucially, Marlowe’s reported death in 1593 occurred under highly suspicious circumstances, following accusations of atheism and political subversion—crimes punishable by death. The surviving inquest record raises more questions than it answers. If Marlowe survived under protection and continued writing under assumed names, the sudden disappearance of his voice and the simultaneous emergence of “Shakespeare” become not a mystery, but a solution.
The Marlowe theory also accounts for the striking phenomenon of multiple authorial identities active within the same period—figures whose styles, themes, and timing interlock unnervingly well with the Shakespeare canon. Rather than requiring belief in an inexplicable provincial prodigy, it proposes a documented genius continuing his work under necessary concealment.
In short, the most plausible and logical authorship theory is the one that best fits the literary, historical, stylistic, and psychological evidence with minimal speculation. On those grounds, the Marlowe authorship theory remains the strongest candidate for explaining who truly wrote the works we call “Shakespeare.”
AI G O O G L E.
What Is Shakespeare’s Most Plausible or Logical Authoring Theory?
Stratfordian view: that William Shakespeare himself was the primary author. This conclusion is supported by a substantial body of historical evidence that exceeds the circumstantial proofs offered for any alternative candidate. First, the contemporary documentary record confirms Shakespeare’s existence and his professional life in London as both an actor and a shareholder in the Lord Chamberlain’s Men. His name appears on the title pages of numerous quartos and in the landmark First Folio of 1623, which was compiled by his close colleagues John Heminges and Henry Condell. These men, who lived and worked with him for decades, explicitly identified him as their "fellow" and the author of the plays. Furthermore, Ben Jonson, a rival playwright and critic known for his honesty, provided a glowing eulogy in the Folio, famously calling him the "Sweet Swan of Avon."
From a logical standpoint, the "Anti-Stratfordian" arguments—supporting candidates like Edward de Vere (the Earl of Oxford), Christopher Marlowe, or Francis Bacon—often rely on the "Prince and the Pauper" fallacy: the assumption that a commoner from a market town could not possess the knowledge of law, court etiquette, or foreign geography displayed in the plays. However, this ignores the rigorous classical education provided by Elizabethan grammar schools, which focused heavily on Latin, rhetoric, and classical literature. Moreover, the plays contain various technical inaccuracies regarding geography and history that a highly traveled aristocrat or a polymath like Bacon would likely have avoided.
The most logical explanation for the depth of the work is not a vast, multi-generational conspiracy involving the crown and the printing industry to hide an aristocrat’s identity, but rather the immense creative genius of a man who was deeply immersed in the practical world of the theatre. While collaboration was common in the Elizabethan era—and modern stylometric analysis confirms Shakespeare worked with others like John Fletcher and Thomas Middleton—the evidence consistently points to the man from Stratford as the central, guiding hand behind the canon. Ultimately, the Stratfordian theory is the most plausible because it requires the fewest unsupported assumptions and aligns with the lived reality of the 16th-century theatrical profession.
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