It is your responsibility to prove your assertion that if we just throw enough hardware at LLMs they will suddenly become alive in any recognizable sense, not mine to prove you wrong.
You are anthropomorphizing LLMs. They do not reason and they are not lazy. The paper discusses a way to improve their predictive output, not a way to actually make them reason.
But don’t take my word for it. Go talk to ChatGPT. Ask it anything like this:
“If an LLM is provided enough processing power, would it eventually be conscious?”
“Are LLM neural networks like a human brain?”
“Do LLMs have thoughts?”
“Are LLMs similar in any way to human consciousness?”
Just always make sure to check the output of LLMs. Since they are complicated autosuggestion engines, they will sometimes confidently spout bullshit, so must be examined for correctness. (As my initial post discussed.)
Sorry, I guess what I was trying to say is that it doesn’t take much to get from “calculator” to a system that is Turing complete, and from there we’re just a few sleeps away from LLMs, and from there…
It is your responsibility to prove your assertion that if we just throw enough hardware at LLMs they will suddenly become alive in any recognizable sense, not mine to prove you wrong.
You are anthropomorphizing LLMs. They do not reason and they are not lazy. The paper discusses a way to improve their predictive output, not a way to actually make them reason.
But don’t take my word for it. Go talk to ChatGPT. Ask it anything like this:
“If an LLM is provided enough processing power, would it eventually be conscious?”
“Are LLM neural networks like a human brain?”
“Do LLMs have thoughts?”
“Are LLMs similar in any way to human consciousness?”
Just always make sure to check the output of LLMs. Since they are complicated autosuggestion engines, they will sometimes confidently spout bullshit, so must be examined for correctness. (As my initial post discussed.)
It’s your job to prove your assertion that we know enough about cognition to make reasonable comparisons.
May as well ask me to prove that we know enough about calculators to say they won’t develop sentience while I’m at it.
Except calculators aren’t models capable of understanding language that appear to become more and more capable as they grow. It’s nothing like that.
Isn’t it, though? Take two cells and rub them together, do it a bit more, boom here we are on Lemmy.
We wouldn’t refer to our consciousness as an emergent property of algae.
Yes, but we would refer to our consciousness as an emergent property of our brain.
And we’re trying to build artificial brains.
Sorry, I guess what I was trying to say is that it doesn’t take much to get from “calculator” to a system that is Turing complete, and from there we’re just a few sleeps away from LLMs, and from there…