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by noncentral
139 days ago
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Just a quick comment on the “fact vs fiction” issue. Humans don’t reliably solve that either. For most of history, people believed the Earth was flat because every local observation they had access to pointed in that direction. Their frame of reference was simply too limited to reveal the error. RCC isn’t claiming that LLMs are uniquely flawed. The point is that any system working with partial visibility(humans included)can’t guarantee globally correct judgments. What counts as “fact” only becomes stable when there is an external reference frame, and embedded agents don’t have access to one. RCC just states these limits in geometric and observability terms. |
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They can and have. But they don't achieve this by using probability to guess the next word in a sentence.
Once again, judgment is an important but ill defined aspect of intelligence.
An LLM has none. Instead, it relies on probability --- which we all know can easily produce incorrect results that sound plausible.
Tempered with human judgment, LLMs can still prove useful in some strictly restrained cases but it's general purpose reliability is highly suspect --- in my judgment. And this lack of reliability counters the logic for applying them in a lot of cases.