|
|
|
|
|
by vouaobrasil
539 days ago
|
|
Again, like so many, you are taking computer use in math as an indivisible whole. I never said that computers were NOT useful. Only that the use of creative AIs in math are counterproductive in the long run, hence implying a point of diminishing returns that we push towards (due to the peverse incentives of academia). There is also a fundamental difference between swimming and math. There is no prisoner's dilemma situation when it comes to swimming: with swimming, people CHOOSE to swim because they like it. But due to different incentives, people will CHOOSE to use AI only because others use it and it will become the only path eventually. In other words, swimming is still possible even though boats exist. People going into mathematics will not have the possibility of being of any use without AI, because the prisoner's dilemma (arms race) will ensure that math is no longer about anyone caring about math without AI. |
|
You’re lamenting that inventing boats has destroyed the beauty of swimming.
- - - Edit - - -
Responding to your expanded argument:
You could never swim to a new continent, which boats enabled. This is the same — people can choose to keep doing the same limited math themselves, in a slower way, but will never reach the places people can aided by tools. That’s simply how the world is. But we shouldn’t restrict the distance people can travel to adhere to the aesthetics of swimming.
You’re arguing precisely that: we must limit our intellectual journey because you don’t approve of the aesthetics of the tool to travel further.