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by HarHarVeryFunny
209 days ago
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> Again, that's all we do. We train extensively until we "get it." Monkey-see, monkey-do turns out not only to be all you need, so to speak... it's all there is. Which is fine for us humans, but would only be fine for LLMs if they also had continual learning and whatever else was necessary for them to be able to learn on the job and be able to pick up new reasoning skills by themselves, post-deployment. Obviously right now this isn't the case, so therefore we're stuck with the LLM companies trying to deliver models "out of the box" that have some generally useful reasoning capability that goes beyond whatever happened to be in their pre-training data, and the way they are trying to do that is with RL ... |
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It'll obviously happen at some point. No reason why it won't.
Just as obviously, current LLMs are capable of legitimate intelligent reasoning now, subject to the above constraints. The burden of proof lies on those who still claim otherwise against all apparent evidence. Better definitions of 'intelligence' and 'reasoning' would be a necessary first step, because our current ones have decisively been met.
Someone who has lost the ability to form memories is still human and can still reason, after all.