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cauch 9 days ago

I don;t get this kind of answers.

- A motor is something that create a force to push a vehicle.

- Oh yeah? My neighbour car does not have wheels and sit on concrete blocks, the vehicle does not move and yet we all agree it has a motor. So it means that I can claim that this other thing that does not move has a motor too.

Sure, human can _some times_ not do some stuffs, but the fact that they can do these stuffs sometimes is the point.

Doing these stuffs is the hard thing. Doing these stuffs is the proof that the machine has what it takes. It does not matter if someone cannot do that stuff, it does not imply that their internal system is not complex enough to potentially do it. But the fact that some people can do that stuff is the demonstration that inside a human skull, there is a system that is complex enough to potentially do it. Unless you can prove that people who don't do it have a fundamentally different system inside their skull, then you cannot pretend that they should be considered as having a less complex system.

twobitshifter 9 days ago | parent [-]

exactly! so the arguments against the AI not prompting itself is not a refutation just as it would not be for a person.

cauch 9 days ago | parent [-]

Uh?

Human _can_ check themselves. They don't _always_ check themselves.

Motor _can_ move vehicle. They don't _always_ move vehicle.

LLM _cannot_ check themselves. They _never_ can. It is not that some don't, they just cannot, they are not a system complex enough to do so.

So, yes, it is a refutation. If you have something that _never_ can move a vehicle, this thing does not qualify as a motor, even if some motor, sometimes, don't move a vehicle.

And if your next argument is "yeah but I would argue you don't need to check yourself to be conscious or to understand things", then you just redefine the definition that is owned by your interlocutor. Your interlocutor is saying that this is a criteria they are expecting. Good for you if you are not expecting this criteria. But the problem is that the answer is not "this criteria is not expected", the answer is "I change the criteria from 'being capable to in some circumstances' into 'does always do it in any circumstances'".

nomel 9 days ago | parent | next [-]

> LLM _cannot_ check themselves. They _never_ can. It is not that some don't, they just cannot, they are not a system complex enough to do so.

All modern agentic harnesses can do this. Nobody uses raw LLM for anything remotely complex. There's always some external system in place. That system is part of the "thought process".

Adjacency doesn't matter here, only what the result of the system of pieces is.

cauch 9 days ago | parent [-]

Check themselves does not mean: do a loop.

It means having self-control on their action and being aware of them. If you ask a system, it will respond, it cannot choose to not respond (even if the response if "I don't want to response", it still "run", still do the work). If you don't ask a system, it will not respond.

Adjacency is the point of the thread here. Saying "you say X is important to decide if the thing is intelligent/understanding/conscious, so let me just change X in the middle of the discussion and say that X does not matter".

That is exactly my first comment in this thread: I don't care if AI think or whatever, my reaction was about these "counter-arguments" that totally miss the point and make the person who push them ridiculous. If you want to have a counter-argument, you first need to understand the interlocutor, not just spew whatever rebuttal you constructed that answer something unrelated to what the interlocutor brought to the conversation.

nomel 9 days ago | parent [-]

> Check themselves does not mean: do a loop.

I'm not sure I understand. How do you do it?

In my thought process, I quite literally stop myself, and say "ok, think about what you just said" to check myself. I literally initiate that loop. If I don't, then I'm not using my own mental agency, and just using my firm coded priors.

I will say that I do seem to have a stop, what you said is wrong logic check voice that pops up without me initiating it. But, it's unreliable, and not too much different than all the content monitoring system used for the streaming clients, that will terminate with "content violation" immediately after the "incorrect" words are sent. I don't think integration is important, just the behavior of the overall system.

cauch 8 days ago | parent [-]

There is no "loop" in the brain, it is all part of a same line of thought. This is visible because, while you can sometimes have a "two voices / dialectic" way of thinking, you can have the exact same thinking in one-go that does not look like a loop at all.

In fact, in the large majority of the time, you don't process "as a loop" at all, you just continuously progress in your reflection without needing a "second voice" to retrigger you. The fact that sometimes we do this is just something we can do, not the result of something needed for our brain to work. For AI systems, this is something needed because the "answering" part is not able to do the loop on its own. And building a bigger system that combine an "answering" part and a "loop" part does not fit this, does not create a self-reflective system, it just makes a non-self-reflective system and a workaround bundled together.

It's a bit like if the "answering" part was unable to provide only one answer and was always producing plenty of different possible answers, including contradictory ones. Then, you can add an external part that will just pick one answer (and add it to the context so the next large set of answer will not be inconsistent), without any intelligence to it. The whole system will look like a human. But we know that the system is not "living" and "aware", because a "living" or "aware" system has its own opinion, while this system is just generating convincing sentence without seeing any hierarchy or value or meaning in each one.

8 days ago | parent | next [-]
[deleted]
nomel 8 days ago | parent | prev [-]

I would claim that, if you think without introspection (that loop), then there is virtually no self check. I'm not sure what "self check" you see that the brain has. Could you describe this "self check in a line of thought"? How do you perceive the check there? This is a genuine question. It definitely doesn't align with how I think about things. I ponder and talk to myself to iterate verify and test my understanding of my own thoughts.

cauch 8 days ago | parent [-]

Maybe a good analogy is "throwing a paper plane in real life" and "throwing a paper plane in a video game".

In real life, the paper moves "by itself". It does not need an external loop that update its position in a loop manner.

In the video game, you need an internal loop, a step-by-step tick, that update the plane position based on its current position and its momentum. And this is why a video game paper plane is not a real object. It is a very good simulation, it looks like it, but it is missing some intrinsic properties that we expect from a real object.

Yet you can analyse the paper plane trajectory and see it as a Markov chain, with quantified step-by-step progress (for example one position point every 0.1 second). The same way you can look at your though process and identify a step-by-step progression. But it does not mean that it works like that intrinsically, it does not mean that the paper plane "jumps" from position point at time T1 to position point at time T1+0.1 second.

For the human brain, there is no "loop centre" in the brain. There is no one (to my knowledge) who got a brain injury and suddenly were unable to keep a single line of thought without having someone else having to feed them the previous thought in order to feed the next thought.

In the brain, the fact that the previous thought feeds the next thought is "how it works", it is intrinsic, it is by design. And this mechanism of thoughts feeding the next thoughts is what creates "consciousness" or "awareness": self-reflection is based on the fact that thoughts are intrinsically linked together, that they "flow" continuously, without needing an external system to update them.

You cannot take away the "loop" part of the paper plane so that it suddenly would be unable to move on its own once thrown away.

Now, you can always say "well, the paper plane in the video game is a very good simulation, it does not matter if it is a real object or not", and that is fair enough. But in this discussion, some people have arguments to support that this property matters, that it is one condition for consciousness or awareness.

nomel 8 days ago | parent [-]

> For the human brain, there is no "loop centre" in the brain.

There are definitely cognitive feedback loops: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11903256/

Is your argument that, because they're external to the Llm, rather than integrated, they don't count, not even in a practical sense?

I think the result of the system is all that's important. Where/how it's implemented doesn't matter for practical results.

If the argument here is that LLM don't have this built in, you should know that nobody has a practical use for plain LLMs these days. Nobody uses them this way, except for debug. All interesting use is through some kind of harness, with all sorts of systems bolted on. I think these conversations are only meaningful in this "agent" context that people actually use LLM, where they stop when they think they're done.

LLM don't have a some self contained loop, like we do, sure. Who cares though. The actual AI system that we use every day definitely do.

cauch 8 days ago | parent [-]

> There are definitely cognitive feedback loops

Have you read the article in question. It is saying that for one continuous thought, the brain will use different part of the brain to do different thing. It does not say that there is a "loop controler" anywhere. On the contrary, it illustrates that there is no loop controller: there is not special brain function that control this loop, this loop is "how the brain works", and LLM don't do that, they are incapable to do that, it is not how they work.

> Is your argument that, because they're external to the Llm, rather than integrated, they don't count, not even in a practical sense?

No, my argument is that the nature of the brain and the nature of the LLM are very different, as different as a real paper plane and a video game paper plane. Some characteristics (for example, awareness) that exist in the brain cannot exist in the LLM because these characteristics are the result of the nature of the thing in question.

The problem is not that you build a system by integrating 2 things together. The problem is that they are different "things", they are different machines, they function, fundamentally, differently. They may produce the same output, but when you say "the brain has the characteristic X, the LLM produce the same output, so the LLM also has the characteristic X", it is logically inconsistent.

Planes are built as a system combining 2 things: a motor and some wings. But they are fundamentally different from a bird. They just don't "work" the same. It is not the same mechanism.

> you should know that nobody has a practical use for plain LLMs these days

That is totally irrelevant. My point is about the nature of the LLM, and the fact that it is stupid to see the same output and to conclude that they have the same characteristic. It is like saying "Birds are flying in the air and are alive. Planes are flying in the air, so I guess they are alive".

> LLM don't have a some self contained loop, like we do, sure. Who cares though. The actual AI system that we use every day definitely do.

No, you miss the point. The problem is not that "you can just add an external loop". The problem is that the brain is a system that works without such control loop. The thoughts are flowing (and they may flow to different brain functions, like explained in the article you quote). It is part of how the system works. Having a system that contains 2 things, one that does one computation and one that control the loop is not equivalent to another system where you cannot decouple the "flowing of the thought" from the "thinking machine".

twobitshifter 8 days ago | parent | prev [-]

The OP said: nozzlegear 19 hours ago [–]

Yes, LLMs don't think on their own, for one; they think when you invoke them.

My rebuttal is that people only think when invoked just the same and can enter states where there is no consciousness just the same. The OP has already accepted that LLMs think, but it seems that you are arguing they do not? This car business is confusing and the LLMs not checking themselves is also wrong, there’s even a benchmark for this https://correctbench.github.io/

cauch 8 days ago | parent | next [-]

No.

OP says: LLMs never think when not invoked.

What you said: I have example where, sometimes, human think when invoked.

That's the difference: human brains are intrinsically different because they are built to be able to think without being invoked, even if there are situations where they think when invoked.

There are tons of obvious examples of human thinking without being invoked. Just take a bath and you will see :)

nozzlegear 8 days ago | parent | prev [-]

To be clear: the person I was replying to asked if the way a human thinks was any different from an LLM with a context window. That's the context of my answer. An LLM is a machine, it can't do anything unless we invoke it or give it the instructions and capabilities to do so. It has no free will, it can't just decide to compose a symphony one day unless those are part of its instructions. It can't do anything unless we tell it to do so and give it the capabilities to do so, it doesn't even exist unless it's loaded into memory. That's obviously different from human consciousness, and that's the whole of the point that I'm making.

You can argue that humans are just biological machines reacting to external stimuli, but that's a philosophical argument that I'm not interested in having and frankly, I think it'd be selling yourself short a little bit.

twobitshifter 8 days ago | parent [-]

Thank you I appreciate your opinion. I do think that we are reacting to external stimuli even though our ego is uncomfortable with being deterministic in any way, which is the free will point that you hit on. I think that is likely to be the point that keeps the argument going as it’s not a settled debate absent any AI, which we clearly all see as either deterministic or semi-random when the temperature gets turned up.

As far as the argument about being loaded in memory, if there’s any consciousness in AI, it’s obviously in different form than a biological consciousness. We’d have to agree that consciousness does not require a body to get past this.