| LLMs don't have a concept of "best". Only most likely in what they've been trained on. I think LLMs ultimately just take imitation to a creative and sophisticated extreme. And imitation simply doesn't comprise the whole of human intelligence at all, no matter how much it is scaled up. The sophistication of the imitation has some people confused and questioning whether everything can be reduced to imitation. It can't. The ability to imitate seeking a goal isn't identical to the ability to seek a goal. The ability to imitate solving a problem isn't identical to the ability to solve a problem. Imitation is very useful, and the reduction of everything to imitation is an intriguing possibility to consider, but it's ultimately just wrong. |
There are levels of sophistication in "imitation". It follows a gradient. At the low end of this gradient is a bad imitation.
At the high end of this gradient is a perfect imitation. Completely indistinguishable from what it's imitating.
If an imitation is perfect than is it really an imitation?
If I progressively make my imitation more and more accurate am I progressively building an imitation or am I progressively building the real thing?
See what's going on here? You fell for a play on words. It's a common trope. Sometimes language and vocabulary actually tricks the brain into thinking in a certain direction. This word "imitation" is clouding your thoughts.
Think about it. A half built house can easily be called an imitation of a real house.