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Terr_ 3 days ago

A couple decades of chess programs nods knowingly: "First time?"

CamperBob2 3 days ago | parent [-]

A couple decades of chess programs nods knowingly: "First time?"

Uh huh. Good luck getting Stockfish to do your math homework while Leela works on your next waifu.

LLMs play chess poorly. Chess engines do nothing else at all. That's kind of a big difference, wouldn't you say?

ben_w 3 days ago | parent | next [-]

> That's kind of a big difference, wouldn't you say?

To their utility.

Not sure if it matters on the question "thinking?"; even if for the debaters "thinking" requires consciousness/qualia (and that varies), there's nothing more than guesses as to where that emerges from.

gowld 3 days ago | parent | prev [-]

Terr_ was agreeing with you and highlighting how old the debate is.

Terr_ 3 days ago | parent [-]

Highlighting, yes, agreeing, no.

For my original earlier reply, the main subtext would be: "Your complaint is ridiculously biased."

For the later reply about chess, perhaps: "You're asserting that tricking, amazing, or beating a human is a reliable sign of human-like intelligence. We already know that is untrue from decades of past experience."

CamperBob2 3 days ago | parent [-]

You're asserting that tricking, amazing, or beating a human is a reliable sign of human-like intelligence.

I don't know who's asserting that (other than Alan Turing, I guess); certainly not me. Humans are, if anything, easier to fool than our current crude AI models are. Heck, ELIZA was enough to fool non-specialist humans.

In any case, nobody was "tricked" at the IMO. What happened there required legitimate reasoning abilities. The burden of proof falls decisively on those who assert otherwise.