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by jart
1088 days ago
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An example that's more analogous to how you're feeling would be the many great crises of faith that happened in the course of modernity, due to science unriddling nature. What you're telling me is that the human mind has a magic touch which imparts meaning and legitimacy to the things it creates. How different is that really, compared to our ancestors, who saw magic in the forces that governed the natural world around them? Some people saw the celestial bodies as spirits or even gods who were powerful and overlooked humanity. It was a rude awakening for many of them to discover that some scientist in his garage could predict and explain their movements. To learn the special roles we'd imagined for ourselves actually had more in common with the things we looked down upon. I think we're at a similar moment today because science has finally produced a theory of consciousness that's compelling, due to how it lets us recreate it. |
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The stochastic parrot model that GPT follows is not even remotely a convincing theory of consciousness, whatsoever, and it has certainly not let us reproduce consciousness. I can hardly even believe you are saying that it has. That's like saying traditional computer game graphics rendering prior to raytracing becoming mainstream is a "compelling theory" of how physical light actually works because some game looks almost photo realistic. In this analogy, I'm the one that's pointing out that what physical light does in the real world is extremely different from what traditional computer game graphics does and even if you can get it to be superficially close it will never be as powerful as the real thing, and to do that we would need a much more computationally expensive ray tracing model. I'm not saying there's anything inherently unique about human brains or that you can't model Consciousness with the computer I'm saying we haven't gotten there yet.