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by plaguuuuuu
332 days ago
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Everyone has this impression that our internal monologue is what our brain is doing. It's not. We have all sorts of individual components that exist totally outside the realm of "token generation". E.g. the amygdala does its own thing in handling emotions/fear/survival, fires in response to anything that triggers emotion. We can modulate that with our conscious brain, but not directly - we have to basically hack the amygdala by thinking thoughts that deal with the response (don't worry about the exam, you've studied for it already) LLMs don't have anything like that. Part of why they aren't great at some aspects of human behaviour. E.g. coding, choosing an appropriate level of abstraction - no fear of things becoming unmaintainable. Their approach is weird when doing agentic coding because they don't feel the fear of having to start over. Emotions are important. |
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> Everyone has this impression that our internal monologue is what our brain is doing.
Not everyone has an internal monologue, so that would be utterly bizarre. Some people might believe this, but it is by no means relevant to Turing equivalence.
> Emotions are important.
Unless we exceed the Turing computable, our experience of emotions would be evidence that any Turing complete system can be made to act as if they experience emotions.