this post was submitted on 28 May 2024
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Fuck AI

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[–] [email protected] 60 points 4 months ago (14 children)

How would we even know if an AI is conscious? We can't even know that other humans are conscious; we haven't yet solved the hard problem of consciousness.

[–] [email protected] 27 points 4 months ago (4 children)

Does anybody else feel rather solipsistic or is it just me?

[–] [email protected] 19 points 4 months ago (1 children)

I doubt you feel that way since I'm the only person that really exists.

Jokes aside, when I was in my teens back in the 90s I felt that way about pretty much everyone that wasn't a good friend of mine. Person on the internet? Not a real person. Person at the store? Not a real person. Boss? Customer? Definitely not people.

I don't really know why it started, when it stopped, or why it stopped, but it's weird looking back on it.

[–] SuddenDownpour 8 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Andrew Tate has convinced a ton of teenage boys to think the same, apparently. Kinda ironic.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 4 months ago

Puberty is rough, for some people it’s your body going “mate, mate, mate” and not much else gets through for 4-5 years, or like 8 maybe.

I’m about the same age. (Xellennials or some shit like that, apparently). And at the time, there was also a big movement in media and culture to sell more shit to people our age (we’d also been slammed toy and cereal ads as kids in the 80s). MTV was switching to all reality bullshit and Clinton was boinking anything that moved. We were doomed to only think about ourselves.

The problem is that a bunch of them never outgrew it, or made it their “brand” like Tate and his ilk.

[–] [email protected] 14 points 4 months ago (1 children)

A Cicero a day and your solipsism goes away.

Rigour is important, and at the end of the day we don't really know anything. However this stuff is supposed to be practical; at a certain arbitrary point you need to say "nah, I'm certain enough of this statement being true that I can claim that it's true, thus I know it."

[–] [email protected] 5 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Descartes has entered the chat

[–] [email protected] 7 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Descartes

Edo ergo caco. Caco ergo sum! [/shitty joke]

Serious now. Descartes was also trying to solve solipsism, but through a different method: he claims at least some sort of knowledge ("I doubt thus I think; I think thus I am"), and then tries to use it as a foundation for more knowledge.

What I'm doing is different. I'm conceding that even radical scepticism, a step further than solipsism, might be actually correct, and that true knowledge is unobtainable (solipsism still claims that you can know that yourself exist). However, that "we'll never know it" is pointless, even if potentially true, because it lacks any sort of practical consequence. I learned this from Cicero (it's how he handles, for example, the definition of what would be a "good man").

Note that this matter is actually relevant in this topic. We're dealing with black box systems, that some claim to be conscious; sure, they do it through insane troll logic, but the claim could be true, and we would have no way to know it. However, for practical matters: they don't behave as conscious systems, why would we treat them as such?

[–] [email protected] 5 points 4 months ago (1 children)

I'm either too high or not high enough, and there's only one way to find out

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 months ago

Try both.

I don't smoke but I get you guys. Plenty times I've had a blast discussing philosophy with people who were high.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 months ago

Underrated joke

[–] archon 1 points 4 months ago

13 year old me after watching Vanilla Sky:

[–] azertyfun 5 points 4 months ago (1 children)

We don't even know what we mean when we say "humans are conscious".

Also I have yet to see a rebuttal to "consciousness is just an emergent neurological phenomenon and/or a trick the brain plays on itself" that wasn't spiritual and/or cooky.

Look at the history of things we thought made humans humans, until we learned they weren't unique. Bipedality. Speech. Various social behaviors. Tool-making. Each of those were, in their time, fiercely held as "this separates us from the animals" and even caused obvious biological observations to be dismissed. IMO "consciousness" is another of those, some quirk of our biology we desperately cling on to as a defining factor of our assumed uniqueness.

To be clear LLMs are not sentient, or alive. They're just tools. But the discourse on consciousness is a distraction, if we are one day genuinely confronted with this moral issue we will not find a clear binary between "conscious" and "not conscious". Even within the human race we clearly see a spectrum. When does a toddler become conscious? How much brain damage makes someone "not conscious"? There are no exact answers to be found.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 months ago

I've defined what I mean by consciousness - a subjective experience, quaila. Not simply a reaction to an input, but something experiencing the input. That can't be physical, that thing experiencing. And if it isn't, I don't see why it should be tied to humans specifically, and not say, a rock. An AI could absolutely have it, since we have no idea how consciousness works or what can be conscious, or what it attaches itself to. And I also see no reason why the output needs to 'know' that it's conscious, a conscious LLM could see itself saying absolute nonsense without being able to affect its output to communicate that it's conscious.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 4 months ago (1 children)

I'd say that, in a sense, you answered your own question by asking a question.

ChatGPT has no curiosity. It doesn't ask about things unless it needs specific clarification. We know you're conscious because you can come up with novel questions that ChatGPT wouldn't ask spontaneously.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 4 months ago (2 children)

My brain came up with the question, that doesn't mean it has a consciousness attached, which is a subjective experience. I mean, I know I'm conscious, but you can't know that just because I asked a question.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

I find it easier to believe that everything is conscious than it is to believe that some matter became conscious.

And beings like us are conscious on many levels, what we commonly call our "consciousness" is only one of them. We are not singular, we are walking communities.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 months ago

It wasn't that it was a question, it was that it was a novel question. It's the creativity in the question itself, something I have yet to see any LLM be able to achieve. As I said, all of the questions I have seen were about clarification ("Did you mean Anne Hathaway the actress or Anne Hathaway, the wife of William Shakespeare?") They were not questions like yours which require understanding things like philosophy as a general concept, something they do not appear to do, they can, at best, regurgitate a definition of philosophy without showing any understanding.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 4 months ago

I think therefore I am.

[–] mindbleach 3 points 4 months ago

The Turing test isn't you and a computer. It's you and a computer and a human. The goal is to figure out which one's the human, not to eyeball whether an interaction feels human-ish. You are forced to admit the computer is at least as conscious as any meatbag you interact with face-to-face.

This is especially important when thinking about proper sci-fi artificial intelligence, because it avoids Chinese Room horseshit. Really, fuck John Searle in his stupid face. The man to this day insists that yanking a CPU out of its motherboard and asking about the program it was running proves the program doesn't know anything. Changing your mind about whether something seemed intelligent, based on later finding out a computer did it, is just bigotry against computers.

[–] [email protected] -1 points 4 months ago (12 children)

Let's try to skip the philosophical mental masturbation, and focus on practical philosophical matters.

Consciousness can be a thousand things, but let's say that it's "knowledge of itself". As such, a conscious being must necessarily be able to hold knowledge.

In turn, knowledge boils down to a belief that is both

  • true - it does not contradict the real world, and
  • justified - it's build around experience and logical reasoning

LLMs show awful logical reasoning*, and their claims are about things that they cannot physically experience. Thus they are unable to justify beliefs. Thus they're unable to hold knowledge. Thus they don't have conscience.

*Here's a simple practical example of that:

[–] [email protected] 9 points 4 months ago (1 children)

And get down to the actual masturbation! Am I right? Of course I am.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 months ago

Should'n've called it "mental masturbation"... my bad.

By "mental masturbation" I mean rambling about philosophical matters that ultimately don't matter. Such as dancing around the definitions, sophism, and the likes.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 4 months ago (4 children)

their claims are about things that they cannot physically experience

Scientists cannot physically experience a black hole, or the surface of the sun, or the weak nuclear force in atoms. Does that mean they don't have knowledge about such things?

[–] [email protected] -1 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) (1 children)

Does that mean they don’t have knowledge about such things?

It's more complicated than "yes" or "no".

Scientists are better justified to claim knowledge over those things due to reasoning; reusing your example, black holes appear as a logical conclusion of the current gravity models based on the general relativity, and that general relativity needs to explain even things that scientists (and other people) experience directly.

However, as I've showed, LLMs are not able to reason properly. They have neither reasoning nor access to the real world. If they had one of them we could argue that they're conscious, but as of now? Nah.

With that said, "can you really claim knowledge over something?" is a real problem in philosophy of science, and one of the reasons why scientists aren't typically eager to vomit certainty on scientific matters, not even within their fields of expertise. For example, note how they're far more likely to say stuff like "X might be related to Y" than stuff like "X is related to Y".

[–] [email protected] 4 points 4 months ago

black holes appear as a logical conclusion of the current gravity models...

So we agree someone does not need to have direct experience of something in order to be knowledgeable of it.

However, as I've showed, LLMs are not able to reason properly

As I've shown, neither can many humans. So lack of reasoning is not sufficient to demonstrate lack of consciousness.

nor access to the real world

Define "the real world". Dogs hear higher pitches than humans can. Humans can not see the infrared spectrum. Do we experience the "real world"? You also have not demonstrated why experience is necessary for consciousness, you've just assumed it to be true.

"can you really claim knowledge over something?" is a real problem in philosophy of science

Then probably not the best idea to try to use it as part of your argument, if people can't even prove it exists in the first place.

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[–] [email protected] 5 points 4 months ago (5 children)

Seems a valid answer. It doesn't "know" that any given Jane Etta Pitt son is. Just because X -> Y doesn't mean given Y you know X. There could be an alternative path to get Y.

Also "knowing self" is just another way of saying meta-cognition something it can do to a limit extent.

Finally I am not even confident in the standard definition of knowledge anymore. For all I know you just know how to answer questions.

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[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 months ago (1 children)

That sounds like an AI that has no context window. Context windows are words thrown into to the prompt after the user's prompt is done to refine the response. The most basic is "feed the last n-tokens of the questions and response in to the window". Since the last response talked about Jane Ella Pitt, the AI would then process it and return with 'Brad Pitt' as an answer.

The more advanced versions have context memories (look up RAG vector databases) that learn the definition of a bunch of nouns and instead of the previous conversation, it sees the word "aglat" and injects the phrase "an aglat is the plastic thing at the end of a shoelace" into the context window.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 months ago (1 children)

I did this as two separated conversations exactly to avoid the "context" window. It shows that the LLM in question (ChatGPT 3.5, as provided by DDG) has the information necessary to correctly output the second answer, but lacks the reasoning to do so.

If I did this as a single conversation, it would only prove that it has a "context" window.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 4 months ago (6 children)

So if I asked you something at two different times in your life, the first time you knew the answer, and the second time you had forgotten our first conversation, that proves you are not a reasoning intelligence?

Seems kind of disingenuous to say "the key to reasoning is memory", then set up a scenario where an AI has no memory to prove it can't reason.

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