| >But now you're making a much stronger claim than merely saying that internal state exists. It's not a different claim, it's the same claim. The reason humans are able to introspect is because they have that internal state. >Humans are capable of telling you a story about what their thought process was (as are LLMs) No. Humans can tell a story that's informed by introspection, while LLMs can only tell a story without any introspection. Humans may also lie and fabricate, but they are at least capable of introspecting, while LLMs are not. >But whether that story will be accurate, much less contain new insights, is much harder prove. If you're going to doubt the explanation then what's the point of asking the question? Necessarily it's going to be information that exists only in that person's mind, so at best you can check it for consistency with the person's own behavior and with the report itself, but some things you'll just have to either accept or ignore. Like, fundamentally you're asking the person to describe features of their own mind such as "he gets bored easily", "he can only hold so many facts at once", "he makes worse decisions under pressure", etc. If for example you're asking the question to improve something in the future (such as documentation or some procedure), it doesn't even make sense to distrust such reports, unless you believe a person like the one being described by the explanation doesn't and can't exist. |
> No. Humans can tell a story that's informed by introspection, while LLMs can only tell a story without any introspection. Humans may also lie and fabricate, but they are at least capable of introspecting, while LLMs are not.
There's still a gap here between "has some hidden internal state" and "that state can provide insight into to their thought process". If all you've shown is that knowledge that is public in LLMs is hidden in humans, there's no reason that should make the human better at introspecting (rather, it just makes the human harder to understand from outside).
> what's the point of asking the question?... If for example you're asking the question to improve something in the future (such as documentation or some procedure)
Indeed. If we knew that asking this kind of question of a human was more likely to provide insights that improved the process in the future than asking it of an LLM, that would be interesting. But it's quite a leap from "humans can have internal state" to that.
> unless you believe a person like the one being described by the explanation doesn't and can't exist
Meaning that a plausible explanation is valuable regardless of whether it's true? Wouldn't that apply just as well to an LLM's explanation?