|
|
|
|
|
by vidarh
332 days ago
|
|
Unless we exceed the turing computable - which there isn't the tiniest shred of evidence for -, nothing we do is "outside the realm of 'token generation'". There is no reason why the token stream generated needs to be treated as equivalent to an internal monologue, or need to always be used to produce language at all, and Turing complete systems are computationally equivalent (they can all compute the same set of functions). > 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. |
|
I mean, theoretically in an "infinite tape" model, sure. But we don't even know if it's physically possible. Given that the observable universe is finite and the information capacity of a finite space is also finite, then anything humans can do can theoretically be encoded with a lookup table, but that doesn't mean that human thought can actually be replicated with a lookup table, since the table would be vastly larger than the observable universe can store.
LLMs look like the sort of thing that could replicate human thought in theory (since they are capable of arbitrary computation if you give them access to infinite memory) but not the sort of thing that could do it in a physically possible way.