| ▲ | logicprog 3 hours ago | |||||||||||||
If LLMs can come up with formerly truly novel solutions to things, and you have a verification loop to ensure that they are actual proper solutions, I don't understand why you think they could never come up with solutions to impressive problems, especially considering the thread we are literally on right now? That seems like a pure assertion at this point that they will always be limited to coming up with truly novel solutions to uninteresting problems. | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | eru 3 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||
"Truly novel" is fast becoming a True Scotsman. | ||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | Yizahi an hour ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||
It probably can, but won't realize that and it won't be efficient in that. LLM can shuffle tokens for an enormous number of tries and eventually come up with something super impressive, though as you yourself have mentioned, we would need to have a mandatory verification loop, to filter slop from good output and how to do it outside of some limited areas is a big question. But assuming we have these verification loops and are running LLMs for years to look for something novel. It's like running an energy grid of small country to change a few dozen of database entries per hour. Yes, we can do that, but it's kinda weird thing to do. But it is novel, no argue about that. Just inefficient. We never had a big demand to define how humans are intelligent or conscious etc, since it is too hard and was relegated to a some frontier researchers. And with LLMs we now do have such demand but the science wasn't ready. So we are all collectively searching in the dark, trying to define if we are different from these programs if not how. I certainly can't do that. I do know that LLMs are useful, but I also suspect that AI (aka AGI nowadays) is not yet reached. | ||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||