| ▲ | tux1968 2 hours ago | |||||||||||||
> An algorithm is an algorithm. A computer is a computer. These things matter. Sure. But we're allowed to notice abstractions that are similar between these things. Unless you believe that logic and "thinking" are somehow magic, and thus beyond the realm of computation, then there's no reason to think they're restricted to humanity. It is human ego and hubris that keeps demanding we're special and could never be fully emulated in silicon. It's the exact same reasoning that put the earth at the center of the universe, and humans as the primary focus of God's will. That said, nobody is confused that LLM's are the intellectual equal of humans today. They're more powerful in some ways, and tremendously weaker in other ways. But pointing those differences out, is not a logical argument in proving their ultimate abilities. | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | Octoth0rpe an hour ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||
> Unless you believe that logic and "thinking" are somehow magic, and thus beyond the realm of computation Worth noting that significant majority of the US population (though not necessarily developers) does in fact believe that, or at least belongs to a religious group for which that belief is commonly promulgated. | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | goatlover an hour ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||
I think computation is an abstraction, not the reality. Same with math. Reality just is, humans come up with maps and models of it, then mistake the maps for the reality, which often causes distortions and attribution errors across domains. One of those distortions is thinking consciousness has to be computable, when computation is an abstraction, and consciousness is experiential. But it's a philosophical argument. Nothing supernatural about it either. | ||||||||||||||
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