|
|
|
|
|
by wizzwizz4
90 days ago
|
|
Humans also have the ability to introspect. Ultimately, (nearly) every software project is intended to provide a service to humans, and most humans are similar in most ways: "what would I want it to do?" is a surprisingly-reliable heuristic for dealing with ambiguity, especially if you know where you should and shouldn't expect it to be valid. The best LLMs can manage is "what's statistically-plausible behaviour for descriptions of humans in the corpus", which is not the same thing at all. Sometimes, I imagine, that might be more useful; but for programming (where, assuming you're not reinventing wheels or scrimping on your research, you're often encountering situations that nobody has encountered before), an alien mind's extrapolation of statistically-plausible human behaviour observations is not useful. (I'm using "alien mind" metaphorically, since LLMs do not appear particularly mind-like to me.) |
|