Consider the following sentences:
• Recently, I’ve started to wonder why writing is so important.
• I’ve recently started to wonder why writing is so important.
• I’ve started to recently wonder why writing is so important.
• I’ve started to wonder recently why writing is so important.
These all say more or less the same thing, but the feeling of them may be different from each other. This is the nature of writing. One can sometimes say things multiple ways, but one may feel closer to (or farther from) the intended tone and feel of a message. This may depend on what else is being written, where the sentence in question is placed relative to other sentences, the mood of the writer, the intended mood of the passage, and so on.
Often, a writer makes a choice seemingly without thinking about it, while sometimes one may sit and ponder the choice more consciously, sometimes for minutes at a time. The effect of such choices on the overall quality of the material may be subtle, or profound. Sometimes, at the end of a writing effort, the author may decide that the effort has failed, and start over.
In part, this illustrates an aspect of writing that involves feedback: the author writes, reads, and adjusts. Sometimes this loop takes place in their head, sometimes by actually writing and reading. Either way, it’s an iterative process that involves imagining how the reader will respond to the writing. By its very nature, such a process requires a participant that can experience the effects of the writing. Moreover, the produce/review/change loop often happens sub-consciously, perhaps a great many times, before a sentence is actually written or modified. To me, this process feels much more subtle than, for example, having an AI produce some text, reviewing it, making suggestions, having another version produced, and so on.