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You don't have to be an Astrophysicist. We have color photographs. Nothing in anyone's model of how things work can refute direct evidence, if evidence and the understanding of the world collide, it is the understanding that gets altered to fit the evidence. And I'm not astrophysicist either, I'm just playing with a stacked deck, because I have trained my new feed to give me quirky (if not mostly useless) neat bits of information. For example, if anyone writes about Voyager, I'm likely to hear about it in a few days. "Apparently at certain times, like during sunsets, the sun can appear blue on Mars" - Yes, it can. And my question was "under what conditions can the sun appear blue?" It failed and continued to fail, even in the presence of guiding hints (But what about Mars?) Perhaps not much can be concluded from the above test, except that ChatGPT can be coaxed into failure modes. We knew that already, the user interface clearly states it can give wrong answers. What is fascinating to me is how people seem to convince themselves that a device that sometimes gives wrong answers is somehow going to fix it's underlying algorithm which permits wrong answers to somehow always be correct. GPT-4 is an improvement, but the tools it uses to improve upon the answers are more like patches on top of the original algorithm. For example, as I believe you said, it generates a math program now to double-check math answers. The downsides of this is that it is still at risk of a small chance of generating the wrong program, and a smaller risk of that wrong program agreeing with its prior wrong answer. For a system that makes errors very infrequently, that's an effective way of reducing errors. But for right now, the common man isn't testing ChatGPT for quality, it's finding answers that seem to be good and celebrating. It's like mass confirmation bias. After the hype dies down a bit, we'll likely have a better understanding of what advances in this field we really have. |
You literally have to tell it to think about what it is saying and to think of all of the possibilities iteratively. That is chain of thought prompting.
GPT-3.5 figures out the correct solution on first response:
"I am standing outside and observing the sun directly without goggles or filtering of any kind. The sun appears to be a shade of blue.
Where could I be standing? Think through all of the possibilities. After stating a list of possibilities, examine your response, and think of additional possibilities that are less realistic, more speculative, but scientifically plausible."