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by reissbaker
657 days ago
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It would invalidate that particular approach, much as a failed attempt at creating a lightbulb would invalidate that particular approach, but would not disprove the lightbulb entirely. Proving that LLMs can never do this would require extremely rigorous theoretical evaluation that even top ML labs are currently unable to do, given the problem of interpretability. In general proving a negative is typically harder than a positive, since a single experiment succeeding proves a positive, but a single experiment failing does not prove a negative; generally science does not demand that scientists attempt to prove a negative when running experiments, or else nearly every drug trial, for example, would be impossible to perform. Complaining that you have staked out a very difficult to defend position — that it's impossible for LLMs to generate good incident reports — does not mean your ideological opponents, who have simpler positions, must do your proof work for you. |
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Please refer to this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burden_of_proof_(philosophy)
Just to make sure we both understand what burden of proof is:
Suppose two people are having a debate over whether or not a teapot exists in the orbit of Jupiter which is impossible to observe via telescope. Where does the burden of proof lie?
Just to reiterate plainly:
Does the burden of proof lie on the person making empirically impossible to falsify claim or the person making the empirically possible to falsify claim?
Which of the following two claims is impossible to empirically falsify?
1. "LLMs can eventually be used to produce good incident reports."
2. "LLMs can never eventually be used to produce good incident reports."