Non-Edgy Gamer
Grand Dragon
- Joined
- Nov 6, 2020
- Messages
- 17,656
GPT (text generation) is similarly "creative". After using it for a while, you can start to see the patterns in how it puts things together, predict it and manipulate it.
And it makes me more conscious of how my brain puts together sentences and comes up with words. How many things do I say that are just patterns that I've learned to use? Expressions I rely on, my personal writing style etc.
It's the difference between a robot dog and an actual one. No matter how many upgrades you put in the robot, it still won't match the ugliest bulldog in the world as a companion. They both may have four legs and be the best hunting device in the world, but the real dog's real qualities make it a better pet, since it's flesh and blood just as you are.
Though I do think we can learn from AI's similarity on some level. How do we learn? How do we process? How can we do better?
AI brings forth the opportunity for the truly skilled and brilliant to shine, and for all the imitators and hacks to be decreased in value, since machines can copy better and faster than they can.
And it makes me more conscious of how my brain puts together sentences and comes up with words. How many things do I say that are just patterns that I've learned to use? Expressions I rely on, my personal writing style etc.
See, I disagree with this though. I think of AI from a utilitarian perspective, but I don't want to demean true human talent, or think that AI can truly replace it yet. It may be able to match or beat a human in results at times, but it isn't actually being creative or intelligent. And I think that's a flaw that can't be overcome. The results may exceed humans entirely, but they still won't have humanity.I think what these AI experiments will show us in the long run is that certain aspects of "humanity" are overrated and over-mystified; in reality, there are just a few simple processes at play with some randomness involved.
It's the difference between a robot dog and an actual one. No matter how many upgrades you put in the robot, it still won't match the ugliest bulldog in the world as a companion. They both may have four legs and be the best hunting device in the world, but the real dog's real qualities make it a better pet, since it's flesh and blood just as you are.
Though I do think we can learn from AI's similarity on some level. How do we learn? How do we process? How can we do better?
AI brings forth the opportunity for the truly skilled and brilliant to shine, and for all the imitators and hacks to be decreased in value, since machines can copy better and faster than they can.