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I'm finding it hard to identify any particulars in this piece, considering the largely self-defeating manner in which the arguments are presented, or should I say, compiled, from popular media. Had it not been endorsed by Stanford in some capacity, and sensationalised by means of punchy headline, we wouldn't be having this conversation in the first place! Now, much has been said about various purported externalities of LLM technology, and continues so, on a daily basis—here in Hacker News comments, if not elsewhere. Between wannabe ethicists and LessWrong types, contemplating the meaning of the word "intelligence," we're in no short supply of opinions on AI. If you'd like to hear my opinion, I happen to think that LLM technology is the most important, arguably the only thing, to have happened in philosophy since Wittgenstein; indeed, Wittgenstein presents the only viable framework for comprehending AI in all of humanities. Part because it's what LLM "does"—compute arbitrary discourses, and part because that is what all good humanities end up doing—examining arbitrary discourses, not unlike the current affairs they cite in the opinion piece at hand, for arguments that they present, and ultimately, the language used to construct these arguments. If we're going to be concerned with AI like that, we shall start by making effort to avoid all kinds of language games that allow frivolously substituting "what AI does" for "what people do with AI." This may sound simple, obvious even, but it also happens to be much easier said than done. That is not to say that AI doesn't make a material difference to what people would otherwise do without it, but exactly like all of language is a tool—a hammer, if you will, that only gains meaning during use—AI is not different in that respect. For the longest time, humans had monopoly on computing of arbitrary discourses. This is why lawyers exist, too—so that we may compute certain discourses reliably. What has changed is now computers get to do it, too; currently, with varying degree of success. For "AI" to "destroy institutions," or in other words, for it doing someone's bidding to some undesirable end, something in the structure of said institutions must allow that in the first place! If it so happens that AI can help illuminate these things, like all good tools in philosophy of language do, it also means that we're in luck, and there's hope for better institutions. |
> If you'd like to hear my opinion, I happen to think that LLM technology is the most important, arguably the only thing, to have happened in philosophy since Wittgenstein;
So, assume cognitive bias and a penchant for hyperbole.
> LLM technology is the most important, arguably the only thing, to have happened in philosophy
Why would "LLM technology" be important to philosophy?
> arguably the only thing, to have happened in philosophy
Did "LLM technology" "happen in philosophy"? What does it mean to "happen in philosophy"?
> indeed, Wittgenstein presents the only viable framework for comprehending AI in all of humanities.
What could this even mean?
Linguistics would appear at least one other of the applicable humanities to large language models.
Wittgenstein was famously critical of Turing's claim that a machine can think to the extent he claimed it caused Turing to create misunderstandings even in his mathematics.
Wittgenstein also disliked Cantor. and even the concept of 'sets'.
I am struggling to see how this all adds up to being the "only viable framework for comprehending AI".
> If it so happens that AI can help illuminate these things, like all good tools in philosophy of language do, it also means that we're in luck, and there's hope for better institutions.
This is a wild ride.
So, "AI" exploits weaknesses in institutions, but this is different from "destroying institutions", and its a good thing because we can improve the institutions by fixing the exploitable areas; which is also a wholly speculative outcome with many counterexamples in real life.
Reads like: "Sure, I broke your window and robbed your store, but you should be thanking me and encouraging me to break more windows and rob more people because I illuminated that glass is susceptible to breaking when a rock is thrown at it. Oh, your shit? I'm keeping it. You're welcome."