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submitted 9 months ago by Veraticus@lib.lgbt to c/technology@beehaw.org
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[-] Veraticus@lib.lgbt 2 points 9 months ago

It is not hand-waving; it is the difference between an LLM, which, again, has no cognizance, no agency, and no thought -- and humans, which do. Do you truly believe humans are simply mechanistic processes that when you ask them a question, a cascade of mathematics occurs and they spit out an output? People actually have an internal reality. For example, they could refuse to answer your question! Can an LLM do even something that simple?

I find it absolutely mystifying you claim you've studied this when you so confidently analogize humans and LLMs when they truly are nothing alike.

[-] barsoap@lemm.ee 3 points 9 months ago

Do you truly believe humans are simply mechanistic processes that when you ask them a question, a cascade of mathematics occurs and they spit out an output? People actually have an internal reality.

Those two things can be true at the same time.

I find it absolutely mystifying you claim you’ve studied this when you so confidently analogize humans and LLMs when they truly are nothing alike.

"Nothing alike" is kinda harsh, we do have about as much in common with ChatGPT as we have with flies purpose-bred to fly left or right when exposed to certain stimuli.

[-] Veraticus@lib.lgbt 2 points 9 months ago

Those two things can be true at the same time.

No, they can't. The question is fundamentally: do humans have any internal thoughts or feelings, or are they algorithms? If you believe other people aren't literally NPCs, then they are not LLMs.

[-] barsoap@lemm.ee 2 points 9 months ago

That doesn't even begin to be a dichotomy. Unless you want to claim humans are more than Turing complete (hint: that's not just physically but logically impossible) we can be expressed as algorithms. Including that fancy-pants feature of having an internal world, and moreso being aware of having that world (a thermostat also has an internal world but it's a) rather limited and b) the thermostat doesn't have a system to regulate its internal world, the outside world does that for it).

[-] Veraticus@lib.lgbt 1 points 9 months ago

we can be expressed as algorithms

Wow, do you have any proof of this wild assertion? Has this ever been done before or is this simply conjecture?

a thermostat also has an internal world

No. A thermostat is an unthinking device. It has no thoughts or feelings and no "self." In this regard it is the same as LLMs, which also have no thoughts, feelings, or "self."

A thermostat executes actions when a human acts upon it. But it has no agency and does not think in any sense; it does simply what it was designed to do. LLMs are to language as thermostats are to controlling HVAC systems, and nothing more than that.

There is as much chance of your thermostat gaining sentience if we give it more computing power as an LLM.

[-] barsoap@lemm.ee 1 points 9 months ago

Wow, do you have any proof of this wild assertion? Has this ever been done before or is this simply conjecture?

A Turing machine can compute any computable function. For a thing to exist in the real world it has to be computable otherwise you break cause and effect itself as the Church-Turing Thesis doesn't really rely on anything but there being implication.

So, no, not proof. More an assertion of the type "Assuming the Universe is not dreamt up by a Holtzmann brain and causality continues to apply, ...".

A thermostat is an unthinking device.

That's a fair assessment but besides the point: A thermostat has an internal state it can affect (the valve), is under its control and not that of silly humans (that is, not directly) aka an internal world.

There is as much chance of your thermostat gaining sentience if we give it more computing power as an LLM.

Also correct. But that's because it's a T1 system, not because the human mind can't be expressed as an algorithm. Rocks are T0 system and I think you'll agree dumber than thermostats, most of what runs on our computers is a T1 system, ChatGPT and everything AI we have is T2, the human mind is T3: Our genes don't merely come with instructions how to learn (that's ChatGPT's training algorithm), but with instructions on learning how to learn. We're as much more sophisticated than ChatGPT, for an appropriate notion of "sophisticated", as thermostats are more sophisticated than rocks.

[-] Veraticus@lib.lgbt 0 points 9 months ago

That’s a fair assessment but besides the point: A thermostat has an internal state it can affect (the valve), is under its control and not that of silly humans (that is, not directly) aka an internal world.

I apologize if I was unclear when I spoke of an internal world. I meant interior thoughts and feelings. I think most people would agree sentience is predicated on the idea that the sentient object has some combination of its own emotions, motivations, desires, and ability to experience the world.

LLMs have as much of that as a thermostat does; that is, zero. It is a word completion algorithm and nothing more.

Your paper doesn't bother to define what these T-systems are so I can't speak to your categorization. But I think rating the mental abilities of thermostats versus computers versus ChatGPT versus human minds totally absurd. They aren't on the same scale, they're different kinds of things. Human minds have actual sentience. Everything else in that list is a device, created by humans, to do a specific task and nothing more. None of them are anything more than that.

[-] barsoap@lemm.ee 1 points 9 months ago

Your paper doesn’t bother to define what these T-systems are

Have a look here. Key concept is the adaptive traverse, Tn-system then means "a system with that many traverses". What I meant with my comparison there is simply that a rock has a traverse less than a thermostat, and ChatGPT has a traverse less than us.

They aren’t on the same scale, they’re different kinds of things.

Addition, multiplication and exponentiation all are on the same scale, yet they're different things. Regarding number of traverses it's absolutely fair to say that it's a scale of quality, not quantity.

Human minds have actual sentience.

Sentience as in the processing of the environment while processing your processing of that environment? Yep that sounds like a T3 system. Going out a bit on a limb, during deep sleep we regress to T2, while dreams are a funky "let's pretend our conditioning/memory is the environment" state. Arachnids apparently can do it, and definitely all mammals. Insects seem to be T2 from the POV of my non-biologist ass.

Everything else in that list is a device, created by humans, to do a specific task and nothing more.

You are a device created by evolution to figure out whether your genes are adaptive enough to its surroundings to reproduce

[-] Veraticus@lib.lgbt 1 points 9 months ago

I’m giving up here but evolution did not “design” us. LLMs are designs and created with a purpose in mind and they fulfill that purpose. Humans were not designed.

[-] barsoap@lemm.ee 1 points 9 months ago

In cybernetics that's irrelevant as the purpose of a system is what it does. I can design an algorithm that plays pong, I can write a program to evolve one, they might actually end up being identical and noone could tell.

[-] Veraticus@lib.lgbt 1 points 9 months ago

It's entirely not irrelevant. Even if you create a program to evolve pong, that was also designed by a human. As a computer programmer you should know that no computer program will just become pong, what an idiotic idea.

You just keep pivoting away from how you were using words to them meaning something entirely different; this entire argument is worthless. At least LLMs don't change the definitions of the words they use as they use them.

[-] barsoap@lemm.ee 1 points 9 months ago

Playing pong. Inputs: ball (and possibly enemy) position, output: paddle left or right. Something like NEAT will very quickly come up with the obvious "track the ball" approach using just as many AST nodes as you would.

[-] lloram239@feddit.de 2 points 9 months ago

People actually have an internal reality.

So do LLMs.

Can an LLM do even something that simple?

Ask it about any NSFW topic and it will refuse.

analogize humans and LLMs when they truly are nothing alike.

They seem way more similar than different. The part were they are different trivially follow from the LLMs architecture (e.g. LLMs are static, tokenizing makes character-based problems difficult, memory is limited to the prompt, no interaction with the external world, no vision, no hearing, ...) and most of that can be overcome by extending the model, e.g. multi-model models with vision and hearing are on their way, DeepMind is working on models that interact with the real world, etc. This is all coming and coming fast.

[-] Zaktor@sopuli.xyz 2 points 9 months ago

no cognizance, no agency, and no thought

Define your terms. And explain why any of them matter for producing valid and "intelligent" responses to questions.

Do you truly believe humans are simply mechanistic processes that when you ask them a question, a cascade of mathematics occurs and they spit out an output?

Why are you so confident they aren't? Do you believe in a soul or some other ephemeral entity that wouldn't leave us as a biological machine?

People actually have an internal reality. For example, they could refuse to answer your question! Can an LLM do even something that simple?

Define your terms. And again, why is that a requirement for intelligence? Most of the things we do each day don't involve conscious internal planning and reasoning. We simply act and if asked will generate justifications and reasoning after the fact.

It's not that I'm claiming LLMs = humans, I'm saying you're throwing out all these fuzzy concepts as if they're essential features lacking in LLMs to explain their failures in some question answering as something other than just a data problem. Many people want to believe in human intellectual specialness, and more recently people are scared of losing their jobs to AI, so there's always a kneejerk reaction to redefine intelligence whenever an animal or machine is discovered to have surpassed the previous threshold. Your thresholds are facets of the mind that you both don't define, have no means to recognize (I assume your consciousness, but I cannot test it), and have not explained why they're important for fact rather than BS generation.

How the brain works and what's important for various capabilities is not a well understood subject, and many of these seemingly essential features are not really testable or comparable between people and sometimes just don't exist in people, either due to brain damage or a simple quirk in their development. The people with these conditions (and a host of other psychological anomalies) seem to function just fine and would not be considered unthinking. They can certainly answer (and get wrong) questions.

this post was submitted on 12 Sep 2023
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