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by leveraction
1180 days ago
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This sounds just like something my brother-in-law said. I think they are both technically correct and both missing the point. Does a calculator truly understand math when it spits out a correct answer? Of course not. And it doesn't matter. I have been really impressed with chatgpt, and when it comes to shiny new tech I am usually in the poo poo camp. If tech does something useful then it is useful tech. The fact that it is not true intelligence doesn't matter at all. Besides, what's intelligence anyway? Aren't we still debating that ourselves'? |
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Unless you're using a definition of "understand" that implies conscience of self, I would argue that a calculator is a device that understands nothing except (a subset of) math. That's what makes a calculator reliable in ways that ChatGPT is not.
Philosophically speaking it could be argued that no software understands anything, but I think in the context of this discussion "understands" means "has a model of its context and the way one interacts with it", which is something a calculator (and plenty other software) definitely has and ChatGPT has not.