avatar
Josh Crowley (@jdcrowley) @joshcrowley.bsky.social

This is like asking if a tamagotchi really experiences death when you forget to feed it

aug 26, 2025, 1:08 pm • 8 2

Replies

avatar
Josh Crowley (@jdcrowley) @joshcrowley.bsky.social

These things don’t think. Their answers aren’t the product of reason but the output of a probabilistic algorithm that finds the next most likely word based on a library of weighted associations. It doesn’t understand what it says. It’s hyper-advanced autocomplete.

aug 26, 2025, 1:11 pm • 2 0 • view
avatar
Josh Crowley (@jdcrowley) @joshcrowley.bsky.social

If you ask it “can you feel?” it’s not engaging in critical self-analysis—it’s providing the most likely series of words that would be the response to that question, based on its available weighted data set built by consuming human-written material without the consent of the authors.

aug 26, 2025, 1:23 pm • 1 0 • view
avatar
Josh Crowley (@jdcrowley) @joshcrowley.bsky.social

A million monkeys hammering on typewriters could eventually produce the works of Shakespeare but that doesn’t mean they understand it or that they Wrote It. This is a similar mechanism, a more guided and sculpted version of monkeys hammering typewriters.

aug 26, 2025, 1:28 pm • 0 0 • view
avatar
Pat @squishy276.bsky.social

They go to Hell every time. They're the only category of being that experiences an afterlife

aug 26, 2025, 1:55 pm • 1 0 • view