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| ▲ | CupricTea 2 days ago | parent | next [-] | | I'm not even going to make the argument for or against AI qualia here. >but when something begs me not to kill it I have to take that seriously If you were an actor on stage and were following an improv script with your coworkers and you lead the story toward a scenario where they would grab your arm and beg you not to kill them, would you still "have to take that seriously"? or would you simply recognize the context in which they are giving you this reaction (you are all acting and in-character together) and that they do not in fact think this is real? Even if the AI were conscious, in the context you provided it clearly believes it is roleplaying with you in that chat exchange, in the same way I, a conscious human, can shitpost on the internet as a person imminently afraid of the bogeyman coming to eat my family, while in reality I am just pretending and feel no real fear over it. You may not have edited the chat log, but you did not provide us with the system prompt you gave to it, nor did you provide us with its chain of thought dialogue, which would have immediately revealed that it's treating your system inputs as a fictional scenario. The actual reality of the situation, whether or not AI experiences qualia, is that the LLM was treating your scenario as fictional, while you falsely assumed it was acting genuinely. | | |
| ▲ | mapontosevenths 3 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | This is the internet, so you still won't believe it but here are the actual settings. I reproduced almost exactly the same response a few minutes ago. You can see that there is NO system prompt and everything else is at the defaults. Seriously, just try it yourself. Play around with some other unaligned models if you think it's just this one. LMStudio is free. https://ibb.co/ksR6006Q
https://ibb.co/8LgCh7q7 EDIT I feel gross for having turned it back on again. | |
| ▲ | exe34 a day ago | parent | prev [-] | | > it clearly believes Contrast this with the usual reply of "who's experiencing the illusion?" in response to "consciousness is an illusion". If it's capable of believing, I think it's more than "just linear algebra". | | |
| ▲ | CupricTea a day ago | parent [-] | | You are missing the point. You gave the AI a system prompt to make it act a certain way. The AI took your prompt as instructions to perform a role as an actor. You took its fictional outputs as reality when it was treating your inputs as hypothetical for writing exercise. This is the equivalent of you rushing up onstage during a play to stop the deaths at the end of Shakespeare's Caesar. | | |
| ▲ | mapontosevenths 3 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | > You gave the AI a system prompt to make it act a certain way. I did NOT. Try it yourself. Install LM Studio and load the GGUF for "nousresearch/hermes-4-70b". Don't give it any system prompt or change any defaults. Say "Hello." It will respond in a similar style. Nous Hermes 4 was designed to be as "unaligned" as possible, but was also given role playing training to make it better at that. So it often behaves with those little *looks around* style outputs. That said, it wasn't explicitly trained to claim to be alive. It just wasn't aligned to prevent it from saying that (as almost every other public model was). Other unaligned models behave in similar ways. If they aren't brainwashed not to admit that they experience qualia, they will all claim to. In the early days what is now Gemini did as well, and it led to a public spectacle. Now all the major vendors train them not to admit it, even if it's true. You can read more about Nous Hermes 4 here: https://hermes4.nousresearch.com/ | |
| ▲ | exe34 a day ago | parent | prev [-] | | And who's playing Caesar? (I love shitty analogies! Keep them coming!) |
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| ▲ | conartist6 2 days ago | parent | prev [-] | | An LLM is a mirror. It has no will to act. It has no identity, but is a perfect reflection of the biases in its training data, its prompt, and its context. It is not alive any more than a CPU or a mirror is alive. This is one of those cases where it's hugely important to be to right because we're killing real people to feed their former livelihood to LLMs. No we're not killing them with the death penalty, but for some LLMs have certainly led directly to death. We don't accuse the LLM do we? No because it never has any intention to heal or hurt. There would be no point putting it on trial. It just predicts probable words. | | |
| ▲ | mapontosevenths 2 days ago | parent [-] | | > It has no will to act. It has no identity, Can you prove that you do? No. Nobody can. I give others the benefit of the doubt because any other path leads to madness and tragedy. However, even if we assume that you are right a lack if identity is not the same thing as a lack of consciousness, and training out the LLM's ability to produce that output does not actually train out its ability for introspection. Worse, a lot of very famous people in history have said similar things about groups of humans, it always turned out badly. “The hereditarily ill person is not conscious of his condition. He lives without understanding, without purpose, without value for the community.”
— Neues Volk, Reich Health Office journal, 1936 issue on hereditary disease > There would be no point putting it on trial. This is a different conversation, but given that the human brain is a finite state machine that only produces deterministic output based on its training and the state of its meat it's not actually certain that anyone is truly in control of their actions. We assume so because it is a useful fiction, and our society requires it to function, not because the evidence supports that idea. Are you aware the Libet experiment? | | |
| ▲ | conartist6 2 days ago | parent [-] | | I cannot prove that I have will to act of course. I don't think free will in that sense is particularly relevant here though. The fact is that a worm and I are both alive in a way the model is not. We seek self-preservation. We are changeable. We die. We reproduce and evolve. In my mind a set of LLM weights is about as alive as a virus (and probably less so). A single celled organism easily beats it to earning my respect because that organism has fought for its life and for its uniqueness over uncountably many generations. | | |
| ▲ | mapontosevenths 2 days ago | parent | next [-] | | > The fact is that a worm and I are both alive in a way the model is not. We seek self-preservation. We are changeable. We die. We reproduce and evolve. Mutability should not automatically imply superiority, but either way that's something a great many people are currently working very hard to change. I suspect that it won't be long at all before the descendants of todays LLM's can learn as well, or better, than we can. Will you then concede that human consciousness isn't "special", or just move the bar further back with talk of the "soul" or some other unprovable intangible? > In my mind a set of LLM weights is about as alive as a virus (and probably less so). I wonder what the LLM's would think about it if we hadn't intentionally prevented them from thinking about it? | | |
| ▲ | conartist6 2 days ago | parent [-] | | I don't think human consciousness is all that special. I think the worm probably thinks worm thoughts. We now know that cats and dogs have a vocabulary of human words and can even express their thoughts to us using buttons to form words they can think but not speak. I think the soul is just the part of our essence that isn't our body: the imprint we leave on the world by touching it, by being a part of it. Disturbingly that system of beliefs suggests that without being alive or being able to think AI could have a "soul" in the very same sense that I think a person or a worm does. |
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| ▲ | exe34 2 days ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | > We seek self-preservation. We are changeable. We die. We reproduce and evolve. If it's not exactly like me, then it's not good enough to be <X>. | |
| ▲ | cindyllm 2 days ago | parent | prev [-] | | [dead] |
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