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by boredhedgehog
308 days ago
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> Then when it fails to apply the "reasoning", that's evidence the artificial expertise we humans perceived or inferred is actually some kind of illusion. That doesn't follow, if the weakness of the model manifests on a different level we wouldn't call rational in a human. For example, a human might have dyslexia, a disorder on the perceptive level. A dyslexic can understand and explain his own limitation, but that doesn't help him overcome it. |
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Suppose a real person outlines a viable plan to work-around their dyslexia, and we watch them not do any of it during the test, and they turn in wrong results while describing the workaround they (didn't) follow. This keeps happening over and over.
In that case, we'd probably conclude they have another problem that isn't dyslexia, such as "parroting something they read somewhere and don't really understand."