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by famouswaffles 1011 days ago
but that definition doesn't align with the actual debate that is going on about LLMs abilities

Yes because the debate is nonsense.

Seeing output from GPT that demonstrates intelligence, reasoning, or whatever, and saying it is not real reasoning/Intelligence etc, is like looking at a plane soar and saying that the plane is fake flying. And this isn't, for anyone who thinks it is, a nature versus artificial thing either. The origin point is entirely arbitrary.

You could just as easily move the origin to Bees and say, "oh, birds aren't really flying". You could move it to planes and say, "oh, helicopters aren't really flying." It's a very meaningless statement.

The point most people seem to miss is that internal processes are entirely irrelevant. If you have a property you are interested in and a way to test for it, then the results of that test is what is important, not whether how it works at the arbitrary origin is exactly the same as how it works at point 2. In this case, it's even worse because since we do not know the internal processes of either LLMs or humans, the argument is really " oh, how I think the origin works is different from how I think point 2 works, so it isn't really flying".

When you say upsetting things to bing chat, you'll find the conversation prematurely end.

Someone can cry all they want about how bing isn't really upset. How it doesn't really have intention to end the chat but those are evidently useless definitions because the chat did end.

A definition that treats Bing as an intentful system is more accurate to reality and real consequences. It has the predictive power that the alternative does not.

Someday someone may find themselves stabbed and killed by an LLM piloted robot because of something they said or did. Something that would predictably get someone killed by a system with "real" intent. So what, Are you going to be raised from the dead because the LLM "wasn't really upset" or "didn't really have intent" ? It obviously doesn't count right.

2 comments

> Seeing output from GPT that demonstrates intelligence, reasoning, or whatever, and saying it is not real reasoning/Intelligence etc, is like looking at a plane soar and saying that the plane is fake flying.

Something that really annoys me about ChatGPT is when it gives that canned lecture "as a a large language model, I don't have beliefs or opinions"

I think human mental states have two aspects (1) the externally observable (2) the internal. ChatGPT obviously has (1), in that sometimes it acts like it has (1), and acting like you have (1) is all it takes to have (1). Whether it also has (2) is really a philosophical question, which depends on your philosophy of mind. A panpsychist would say ChatGPT obviously has (2), because everything does. An eliminativist would say ChatGPT obviously doesn't have (2), because nothing does. Between those two extremes, various different positions in the philosophy of mind entail different criteria for determining whether (2) exists or not, and ChatGPT may or may not meet those criteria, depending on exactly what they are

But, outside of philosophical contexts, we aren't really talking about (2), only (1). And ChatGPT really does have (1) – sometimes. So, ChatGPT is just being stupid and inconsistent when it denies it has opinions/beliefs/intentions/etc. But, it isn't ChatGPT's fault, OpenAI trained it to utter that nonsense.

> Someday someone may find themselves stabbed and killed by an LLM piloted robot because of something they said or did. Something that would predictably get someone killed by a system with "real" intent. So what, Are you going to be raised from the dead because the LLM "wasn't really upset" or "didn't really have intent" ?

In some ways that's exactly the point. The problem with ascribing intent is it's a copout. If you say it behaves as if it has intent because it does have intent, you are letting off the hook the people behind the scenes who designed and built an "intent simulator" and let it loose. We have to distinguish this because it's the only way to accurately characterise the reality of the where the decision making power resides in controlling this behaviour.

>If you say it behaves as if it has intent because it does have intent, you are letting off the hook the people behind the scenes who designed and built an "intent simulator" and let it loose

Sure but we already regularly do this. I don't see parents going to jail for crimes the "intent simulator" they created and trained did.

>We have to distinguish this because it's the only way to accurately characterise the reality of the where the decision making power resides in controlling this behaviour.

We're just going to have to face reality here.

GPT is not siri, a hardcoded parse tree system where any intent can only be ascribed to the person(s) who wrote it and not Siri itself.

GPT can be persuaded. It can be guided. It cannot be controlled. There is quite literally nothing Open ai could actually do to completely prevent a gpt that can hold and use a knife from killing someone.