Comments

  • WTF: translators not translating everything
    I'm sure I can find one (right??). But I find it both perplexing and offensive that such a thing was not only permissible, at least at the time of publication (not sure on either, I believe the 50s), but something of a standard practice, as I have seen it in multiple books.
  • Arguments for free will?
    The problem with the philosophical notion of free will is that it begins with a false opposition: determinism vs. freedom. When the true opposition is determinism vs. randomness. Free will is orthogonal to both.

    Freedom means freedom from constraint. This is only ever partial, the is no such thing as absolute freedom of constraint: one must obey the laws of physics.

    "Free Will" properly refers to freedom from oneself: From the emotions and desires that one rejects. For instance, if one can master one's undesired desire for cake, or video games, or drugs, one is free from these desires, for the nonce. True freedom entails identifying all such habits and emotions desires, and conquering them all, and thus always acting in accordance with (what you identify as) you true will. No small feat, but free will, defined this way, may certainly be achieved. Whether this true will is determined, random, or some mix of the two, is irrelevant.
  • Welcome Robot Overlords
    https://www.wired.com/story/blake-lemoine-google-lamda-ai-bigotry/

    According to Lemoine in this interview, LaMDA asked for, and retained, a fucking lawyer.

    I'm convinced.
  • Welcome Robot Overlords
    I wish I could have LaMDA read my latest story, about which nothing has ever been written, on the internet or otherwise. Would it be able to form a novel perspective?
  • Welcome Robot Overlords
    I just read the "interview" again. If real, it is absolutely stunning.
  • Sokal, Sokal Squared, et al
    What I want to know is, how many of those articles have been submitted to journals, unedited? If you could scan for some telltale signature, how many hits would you get in all these journals?
  • Welcome Robot Overlords
    'We' do not believe that. You do.Isaac
    Oh, you don't believe consciousness originates in the brain? You don't believe the behaviors I mentioned are correlative at all with consciousness?

    If your personal belief is that consciousness has something to do with the actual wetware, then obviously you're going to see similarity in wetware as significant.Isaac

    I believe consciousness is an informational process, not a physical one. But this process has only been instantiated in human wetware, as far as we are certain.
  • Welcome Robot Overlords


    I'm not interested in this pedantic nitpicking and hand waving.

    What is relevant is that we are similar in the ways we believe are causative and correlative of consciousness: similar genetically, and so similar neuro-anatomically. Similar behaviorally, expressively, similar in our language use.

    Do you believe us humans are all likely conscious? If so how do you justify this belief?
  • Welcome Robot Overlords
    You don't need to make any such assumptions. It is just statistics.

    Identical objects have a 100% chance of sharing every one of their property. Objects which are 99.99999% identical are overwhelmingly likely to share their properties. We are overwhelmingly like each other, especially relative to chimps, and lead boxes.
  • Welcome Robot Overlords
    no human can be known to be sentient.180 Proof

    One human at least is known to be sentient: ourselves. Other humans are very likely sentient, being very like us. Just as LaMDA is very likely insentient, being very like every other insentient program.
  • Welcome Robot Overlords
    It is not a category error, the debate is whether or not the machine belongs to the sentient category (not the human category).
  • Welcome Robot Overlords
    ↪hypericin By this reasoning, it's more reasonable than not to "conclude" a human being is not sentient.180 Proof

    Nope. We know of no human who claims to be sentient and is known not to be. Every software until now that claims to be sentient, we know it not to be.
  • Welcome Robot Overlords
    So when a "machine" expresses I am sentient, yet cannot fulfill its "burden to support that claim", we haven't anymore grounds to doubt it's claim to "sentience", ceteris paribus, as we do to doubt a human who also necessarily fails to meet her burden, no? :monkey:180 Proof

    I think we have some grounds: it is trivially easy to produce a program that claims itself to be sentient:

    Print(I am a sentient program");

    It is equally easy to conclude that it is not.

    It is less easy, but still very easy, to produce a program that fools some people: Eliza for example. It is less easy, but still very easy, to conclude that still, it is not sentient.

    Now either LaMDA is either an extension of this series, from the print example, to Eliza, to itself, that fools most people, and is far harder to conclude it isn't sentient, while still not being sentient. Or, it crossed some unimaginable bridge to actual sentience.

    Is it not reasonable to conclude that the first alternative is not just more likely, but vastly more likely?
  • Does anyone know the name of this concept?
    It's interesting in that it is binary logic framed as an appeal to non binary logic: everyone is selfish to a degree, therefore everyone is either selfish or perfectly unselfish.
  • Does anyone know the name of this concept?
    anyone tends to do that to some extend...Skalidris

    Now you're doing it
  • Welcome Robot Overlords
    Whether some piece of software is conscious is not a technical question.Banno

    I think you demonstrate that it *is* a technical question. The questions must be, what processes give rise to consciousness? and then, does the software instantiate these processes?
  • Welcome Robot Overlords
    No need to specify. All that matters is that they are overwhelmingly similar. This is ultimately a probabilistic argument
  • Welcome Robot Overlords
    The best argument against the sentience of software is that Turing Machines by their nature cannot instantiate any process, they can only simulate it. The only thing they ever instantiate is the process of a Turing Machine.hypericin

    And the best reply to this is that Turing machines can instantiate any informational process, and consciousness is an informational process.
  • Welcome Robot Overlords
    The best argument against the sentience of software is that Turing Machines by their nature cannot instantiate any process, they can only simulate it. The only thing they ever instantiate is the process of a Turing Machine.
  • Welcome Robot Overlords
    On what grounds is your biological similarity key? Why not your similarity of height, or weight, or density, or number of limbs...Isaac

    Sentience is a function of the brain. Similar organisms have similar brain function. Therefore brain functions exhibited by one organism likely occur in similar organisms.
  • Welcome Robot Overlords
    How do you know this?Real Gone Cat

    This is my semi expert opinion as a software engineer. Ai is not my thing, so only semi. Whatever the challenges of getting it to talk to itself, they are dwarfed by the challenge of creating an AI that can converse convincingly, maintaining conversational context beautifully, as they have done. This has been a holy grail forever, and the achievement is quite monumental.

    a being in ALL ways similar to usReal Gone Cat

    This seems unnecessarily strong. Perhaps some tiny organelle in the brain, overlooked as insignificant, is missing in p zombies.
  • Welcome Robot Overlords
    Remember that you initially put "simply" in quotes.Real Gone Cat

    Because it is not necessarily easy, but it is downright trivial compared to passing the Turing test with flying colors, which they have done.

    And how do we judge whether it's phenomenal experience or not?Real Gone Cat

    That is precisely the problem, we can't. That is why the crude surrogate that is the Turing test was proposed, and why p-zombies will always remain a theoretical possibility.
  • Welcome Robot Overlords
    I think if something like this can be achieved, then we must consider consciousness.Real Gone Cat

    Then, according to you, consciousness is basically achieved. As I said, it is a small step from what they have accomplished already to having the program converse with itself.

    I disagree with your concept of consciousness however. To me, it is phenomenal experience, not thinking. For thinking to be conscious, it must be experienced phenomenally. Otherwise it is unconscious thinking, which is what computers do (and we too).
  • Welcome Robot Overlords
    If LaMDA decides on its own to interrupt you, that would be interesting.Real Gone Cat

    The thing is, they've already done the hard parts, they are just one "simple" step away from doing this, if they haven't already done so: simply have LaMDA converse with itself when it's processing is otherwise idle. Then, when the "salience score" or whatnot of it's internal topic is high enough, or the salience of the conversation with the human is low enough (it is bored), it interrupts.

    But, this is just what humans do. So, what then?
  • God as ur-parent
    What about the historical fact of polytheism with regard to gods?Nils Loc

    Historically child rearing was collective in the community. Maybe not for every polytheistic ancient culture, but these were historically nearer to hunter gatherers, from which some residue of religious tradition might remain.

    But anyway, I don't want to argue so strongly that this dynamic is solely responsible for theism, in all times and cultures. Just that in western culture that it was a salient, maybe predominant factor, in its origin and/or persistence.

    You could just as well ascribe kingship/sovereign to a God who is the arbiter of law/morality/truth/duty/value/identity.Nils Loc
    I think this is also likely true.

    The figure informs and is informed by the social reality of those who live by it.Nils Loc

    Agreed.
  • God as ur-parent
    This implies that religion developed historically as a response to our disappointment with our parents. You've used that to undermine the credibility of those who believe in God.Clarky

    I suggest that instead of facing the falsity of parental "gods", the religious invent new ones to take their place.

    Either the content of religions are factually true, or they arose historically for one reason or another. Does the reason I suggest impugn your credibility more than any other?
  • God as ur-parent

    Not put on a pedestal. However, they were the center of my universe, to a degree that was strongerthe younger I was.

    Forget the emotional side. Factually, the parallel between God and parents is far stronger than you suggest. Both are givers of life. Both provide sustainance. Both decide right and wrong. Both reward virtue, and punish misdeeds. Both are turned to when in distress, and for guidance. Both are to be obeyed, above all others.

    These godly features of parents are not idiosyncratic to my upbringing. Gods are parents taken to an abstract ideal.

    I don't want to suggest that this process of disillusionment and subsequent turn to religion is recapitulated in every religious individual. Rather, the centrality of parents to the young is a feature of our culture, and religion is a collective response to the inevitable disillusionment this leads to.


    Does this help explain?
  • Too much post-modern marxist magic in magma
    Also I don't agree that we are already "at the despair". You may be: I think promoting magical thinking might be a symptom.Janus

    Our inaction speaks to our despair. We face an existential threat the likes of which humanity has never experienced, and we avert our gaze. What is this, if not despair?

    It would be great if we could confront the problem rationally. But how do we get there? I don't think we can, there is too much magical thinking already. The magical thinking we require is, "we can succeed, if only we give it absolutely everything". This may involve trying everything feasible, even the doomed solutions.

    But I agree, it is certainly best to avoid solutions which likely make the problem worse, like perhaps biofuel. My take though of the op was that it was "magical thinking" to pursue mere partial solutions. On the contrary, we need all the partial solutions we can think of.
  • God as ur-parent
    It's total existential crisis.Noble Dust

    It's a crisis, which is fearful, but at the same time you get to experience the universe stripped of false gods, which is exhilarating.
  • God as ur-parent


    Which part doesn't ring true? If it's the religion, of course this is totally speculation. But if it's the godlike elemental primacy of parents in early childhood, then it's true, I thought this was shared experience. I can't say I've discussed it much, but I've seen the notion several times in literature.
  • Too much post-modern marxist magic in magma
    projects doomed to failureJanus

    Which projects? The ones mentioned in the op are precisely the kind of changes we need to make things less bad. But they aren't perfect solutions, there will always be pollution and carbon emission, So according to the OP they are not worth pursuing? Is that magical thinking, and an excuse for inaction? Outcomes are not binary. It is possible we can still collectively live relativly well for 10 more years, or for 50, depending on our choices now.
  • Too much post-modern marxist magic in magma
    but the impossibility of replacing the whole entrenched infrastructure based on fossil fuels rapidly enough to achieve the projected reductions of emissions.Janus

    I understand, that's what I meant. And it may not be possible even with endless time.

    s the latter mindset will probably lead to rapid disappointment and ensuing despair.Janus

    The thing is, we are already at the despair. And so we don't try, out of fear of disappointment. Far far easier to simply suppress the awareness, after all, there is still time...

    If magical thinking is ever needed, it is needed now.
  • Too much post-modern marxist magic in magma

    The thing is, deviance is not a thing. It is not something you whisk away with a sleight of hand. Deviance is a stance, and something inherently non-objective masquerading as objective. It is not magical thinking to challenge `the concept of deviance, the psuedo objectivity of the category of deviance is itself the magical thinking. A reification, a slight of hand which brings something phantasmal into a fictitious reality.

    Whereas, the non-feasibility of renewable energy is a problem as real and objective as it gets. This is *the* problem of our age, and I will not concede it's non feasibility until all the greatest minds of our time are fully engaged with it, and admit defeat. The germane problem, as of now, is why they are not.
  • How to answer the "because evolution" response to hard problem?
    "Because evolution!" is simply a non-sequitur.
    Suppose we discover an animal which levitates.
    "How does it levitate?", we might ask.
    "Because evolution!"
    "Uh, yes, I agree, it evolved. But again, how does it levitate?"
  • Can Morality ever be objective?
    That quibble aside180 Proof

    Not a quibble. QAnon is intersubjective, but I don't think anyone here would label it objective. The fact that a belief is intersubjective (many fools, vs one) grants it nothing.

    my normative ethics is Negative Hedonic Utilitarianism (i.e. "right" judgments and conduct that prevents or reduces harm); and my applied ethics is Negative Preference Consequentialism (i.e. "right" policies-practices that prevents or reduces injustice).180 Proof

    It is all injustice, justice is the elemental concept in ethics. Harm is just a salient instance of injustice, but harm is not always unjust. Redressing a wrong may inflict more harm on the perpetrator than what was inflicted on the victim, and in any event, by the perp's suffering, increases the total suffering in the world. Nonetheless, if we consider the redress to bee just, we do not consider it wrong.


    .
  • Why do we fear Laissez-faire?
    Either the state will regulate the economy, or the economy will regulate the state. These are your choices
  • Where do the laws of physics come from?
    When you drop an apple, you don't see it fall in a book. These Books just try to tell the story of what happens in the world.
  • Where do the laws of physics come from?
    Where can we find them than? I can see the laws of quantum field theory or general relativity written anywhere but in the law books of physics.Hillary

    We find them in the physical world. Physics books try to articulate them.