Either you say that a pocket calculator understands arithmetic, and that LLM understand language, which is something trivial. If a pocket calculator understands arithmetic, than previous substitutes to calculators, such as an abacus, do too. In this case, a word dictionary also understand language. And it is basically what Chiang's article says: the LLM don't understand language more than a word dictionary does. If you disagree with Chiang, it looks like you do only because you don't understand what he is saying, or somehow are not mature enough to realise that Chiang may use a different definition of "understanding" than yours in a fully legitimate way, like everyone is always doing when talking about plenty of subject.
Or you pretend that a pocket calculator understanding of arithmetic is somehow different than the one of an abacus or other obviously inanimate object who are obviously not thinking.
I'm happy both ways:
Either you say that a pocket calculator understands arithmetic, and that LLM understand language, which is something trivial. If a pocket calculator understands arithmetic, than previous substitutes to calculators, such as an abacus, do too. In this case, a word dictionary also understand language. And it is basically what Chiang's article says: the LLM don't understand language more than a word dictionary does. If you disagree with Chiang, it looks like you do only because you don't understand what he is saying, or somehow are not mature enough to realise that Chiang may use a different definition of "understanding" than yours in a fully legitimate way, like everyone is always doing when talking about plenty of subject.
Or you pretend that a pocket calculator understanding of arithmetic is somehow different than the one of an abacus or other obviously inanimate object who are obviously not thinking.