> Remember no matter haw complex an algorithm it is ultimately a lot of Boolean switching acting on what ever data is dumped into it.
LCOn Sunday, March 12, 2023 at 11:42:12 AM UTC-5 John Clark wrote:The linguist Noam Chomsky wrote what in my opinion was a very foolish article in the New York Times called "The False Promise of ChatGPT" in which he tried to simultaneously make the case that a computer could never do what ChatGPT can clearly already do, and that it wouldn't make any difference even if it could, and that it could reach false conclusions if it was fed false data (as if that wasn't also true for human beings), and that it was terrible that it didn't give its personal opinion on moral issues even though Chomsky would certainly criticize it even more if it did take such a stand. ChatGPT reads everything so somebody asked Sydney what him what he thought about Chomsky's article and I think the machine gave a pretty good rebuttal:Quantum computer expert Scott Aaronson also has some interesting things to say about this:
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Remember no matter haw complex an algorithm it is ultimately a lot of Boolean switching acting on what ever data is dumped into it.
--Stathis Papaioannou
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Remember no matter haw complex an algorithm it is ultimately a lot of Boolean switching acting on what ever data is dumped into it.LC
On Sunday, March 12, 2023 at 11:42:12 AM UTC-5 John Clark wrote:The linguist Noam Chomsky wrote what in my opinion was a very foolish article in the New York Times called "The False Promise of ChatGPT" in which he tried to simultaneously make the case that a computer could never do what ChatGPT can clearly already do, and that it wouldn't make any difference even if it could, and that it could reach false conclusions if it was fed false data (as if that wasn't also true for human beings), and that it was terrible that it didn't give its personal opinion on moral issues even though Chomsky would certainly criticize it even more if it did take such a stand. ChatGPT reads everything so somebody asked Sydney what him what he thought about Chomsky's article and I think the machine gave a pretty good rebuttal:Quantum computer expert Scott Aaronson also has some interesting things to say about this:
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On Sun, Mar 12, 2023, 8:57 PM Stathis Papaioannou <stat...@gmail.com> wrote:On Mon, 13 Mar 2023 at 04:12, Lawrence Crowell <goldenfield...@gmail.com> wrote:Remember no matter haw complex an algorithm it is ultimately a lot of Boolean switching acting on what ever data is dumped into it.That means that if the entity displays intelligent behaviour, Boolean switching acting on whatever data is dumped into it can generate intelligent behaviour.Boolean logic gates (and, or, not) are universal. There's no finitely describable behavior that can't be replicated by the repeated application of boolean logic gates paired with a memory.
Does it really display intelligent behavior, and now you will need to define intelligent behavior with testable parameters. Do humans display intelligent behavior? How often, and how consistently? Many say crows do.
This was part of my reason in hectoring JC on this. A neurobiologist tells, via research how parts of the human brain behave, and thus produce intelligence and (non-philosophically) consciousness. What part of the server farm enacts the illusion (I think) of intelligence?
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-----Original Message-----
From: Stathis Papaioannou <stat...@gmail.com>
To: everyth...@googlegroups.com
Sent: Sun, Mar 12, 2023 9:29 pm
Subject: Re: ChatGPT's rebuttal to Chomsky
On Mon, 13 Mar 2023 at 12:18, Jason Resch <jason...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Sun, Mar 12, 2023, 8:57 PM Stathis Papaioannou <stat...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Mon, 13 Mar 2023 at 04:12, Lawrence Crowell <goldenfield...@gmail.com> wrote:Remember no matter haw complex an algorithm it is ultimately a lot of Boolean switching acting on what ever data is dumped into it.That means that if the entity displays intelligent behaviour, Boolean switching acting on whatever data is dumped into it can generate intelligent behaviour.Boolean logic gates (and, or, not) are universal. There's no finitely describable behavior that can't be replicated by the repeated application of boolean logic gates paired with a memory.Yes. But more generally, even from a position of ignorance, if you don’t believe that something made from electrical circuitry (or whatever) can display intelligent behaviour, and something made from electrical circuitry does in fact display intelligent behaviour, that means you were wrong.--https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/everything-list/CAH%3D2ypXZLOOeKndehY1w3iseRPbrbF1HGG1dAk9rDh%3DvOtfVFA%40mail.gmail.com
Stathis Papaioannou--
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An operational test for intelligence requires that ability to act in the world to achieve goals. LLM's are intelligent in that they act to satisfy prompts. If you went to the beach and you said to a crab, "Write in the sand a short poem about waves." and the crab scratched out:Bornof wind andearth's embracean ocean's memory ofstorms beyond the horizonits undulating information uselessly inscribedin the meandering sandfinds voice at lastits fall a sigh asingle syllableof surfYou'd think the crab was pretty smart. An LLM could do that. The only reason for us thinking it is not intelligent is that we know how the LLM does it. When I first took a class in AI fifty years ago at UCLA. The Professor explained that the definition of intelligence was "whatever computers can't do yet."
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Would it be more accurate to think that unless something is driven by need, as in an amygdala, it is not alive. This may be a different question than is it intelligent, is it conscious?
I still need to know how it became conscious when just using chips and data? Would this then favor a pantheist point of view, or even panentheistic one?
> I still need to know how it became conscious when just using chips and data
On Wed, Mar 15, 2023, 7:59 AM <spudb...@aol.com> wrote:I am a not a neurobiologist, old son. I could try to see if there are any papers out on grey goo becoming self-aware and self-reflecting? My Definition!
Anything with a "self" is conscious.Anything with "awareness" is conscious.Therefore your definition of "self awareness", by restricting consciousness to things that are only aware of oneself but not other things in the environment, you may only be capturing some, but not all classes of consciousness entities.Likewise by defining consciousness as "self reflection", you may overly restrict consciousness only to those selves which happen to reflect upon that self, and perhaps wrongly deny consciousness to selves who do not self reflect.It is possible that reflection (at least reflection on some level) is necessary to consciousness. But I have not seen a strong argument for it yet. I do think the capacities for self-awareness and self-reflection exist in humans, but do we do it all the time?Are we self reflecting and self aware of ourself in every moment of our consciousness? What about raw sensory experiences when we live in the moment, such as when catching a wave or riding a rollercoaster?Are fruit flies self-reflecting and self-aware? Are they consciousness of the presence of a banana on the counter? These questions keep me up at night.
If you have a paper on how consciousness arises from intel, Nvida, and AMD chips please supply the link. It's chips and salsa to me.
I think focusing on hardware is a red herring. Consciousness is a high level phenomenon and I believe it exists in high level abstractions of information processing and computation. Seeking the magic of consciousness in the neurochemicals or silicon chips is in my view, as misguided as seeking to find it in the quarks and electrons.
If you claim something just spoke from a D-Wave superchilled box and it asked how you were doing, I'd consider that a true possibility. Photonics? Ok lets roll with it.
Trace the physical causes behind someone uttering the words "I am conscious" back through the signals in the nerves of their vocal cords into the deepest recesses of their brain. There you will find consciousness as the processes that stand behind the person thinking and reasoning and concluding, and then deciding to utter the words "I am conscious".I think you can do the same for any silicon or quantum computer, in principle. Consciousness, presumably, is what causes us to talk about consciousness. It's therefore something that exists in the causal chain of physics, and something amenable to investigation.Jason