|
|
|
|
|
by stickfigure
2008 days ago
|
|
When you say "I like the wine I'm drinking", your neural patterns are firing in a way that makes you want to output that text. Anything more than that is a presumption. You may think "well, I actually like this wine!" but I think that's largely programmed - we even have a phrase for this, "acquired taste". You don't think tastes can be programmed purely textually? Advertising seems to suggest otherwise. The problem with GPT[n] as an AGI is that (as I understand it) it doesn't have a continuous retraining process the same way that human brains do. Neurons aren't being repotentiated with each interaction, so there's no short-term memory. But that seems a technical point; it's not hard to imagine this as a feature of GPT50. |
|
When the light from the sun bounces off my glass and into my eye the biochemical neurological reaction we call "thought" forms about that glass.
Not some generic glass. That glass. It is why I can ask you to pass me it: the light bounces in your eye too.
There is no text generation system I am aware of which conceptualizes and responds to an environment.
It is literally just generating text, it isn't thinking about anything. If you request repeated runs of generation, you receive inconsistent results.
On one run you get, "I like wine!", on another, "Wine is horrible!".
The machine doesn't know what wine is; and certainly does not like wine, nor find it horrible. These are just meaningless symbolic patterns that are "statistically similar" to examples given to it.
It has nothing it wishes to say; and nothing it wishes to talk about. It's a trick.