But they didn't play the instruments on their first couple albums, or so I've read.
For The Monkees and More of the Monkees, Nesmith and Tork were granted limited participation despite the former writing and producing several of the songs on those LPs. For example, the harpsichord piece in "The Girl I Knew Somewhere" was played by Tork, and his guitar work can be heard on some tracks of that period. To anyone in the California music club scene of the early to mid 1960s, Nesmith and Tork were seen playing live (e.g., the Wiskey a Go Go and other clubs), and Nesmith had his penned hit for The Stone Poneys, so you had members actually roughing it and/or being in the business before becoming a part of The Monkees.
Further, Micky also played with a group (as a guitarist) and recorded a single before the Monkees era, so for the critics--and some rival rock bands--to paint them as actors who were pretending was born of deliberately ignoring their backgrounds and actual studio work all thanks to the Monkees outselling their self-appointed "kings" of rock music.
I'm detecting a philosophical objection to the actual concept of artificial intelligence.![]()
Well, that's the key--HAL is artificial, so his every action and reaction is the result of programming, and he lacks a true mind, no soul or anything humans recognize as the standard for a living being.