| ▲ | john_strinlai 2 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||
>Doesn't seem much like a mental crisis to me. you are basing this on the introduction? the 2nd sentence of the entire thing? skipping the entire rest of the article detailing exactly how the mental crisis unfolded, including persistent and long-lasting delusions, multiple trips to the hospital, inability to hold a conversation, assault, and an attempted suicide. interesting (and obviously not in good faith) choice of quote! of course he wasnt having a mental crisis before he decided to use chatgpt. you have to get past paragraph 1, sentence 2. >Even the title of the article itself calls him delusional. yes, exactly? delusions and delusional disorder are considered a mental crisis. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | kleiba an hour ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
> of course he wasnt having a mental crisis before he decided to use chatgpt. you have to get past paragraph 1, sentence 2. So, in your opinion, what made a guy with an alleged 20yr experience in IT come to the conclusion that the software program he's chatting with had suddenly reached consciousness because of his time, attention and input? That he had touched "her" and changed something? Maybe if you had never heard of computers before, you could go like "oh, well, who knew that machines could actually become real?" But if you're actually from the field, this is hard to believe - unless maybe if you're a die hard Pinocchio fan. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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