• ArbitraryValue@sh.itjust.works
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    3 days ago

    Yes, but I don’t see that as particularly significant in this context. Information, including the knowledge of economic theory stored in a human brain, can be represented digitally. The fact that a present-day AI presumably can’t actually experience what it’s like to be unhappy as prices rise and incomes fall doesn’t affect its ability to reason about economics.

    • Optional@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      We should probably just agree to disagree. I think the strides made in AI are at the very least impressive and have made some things (text-to-speech, for example) better - if not enormously then at least noticeably.

      But there isn’t a true analog to be had between calculated probabilities and conscious thought. The former is a mimic of varied competence, but has no logic inherent to it. It requires human maintenance, it’s only path to “growth” if we want to call it that, is a black-box of infinite probabilities it calculates at incredible speed.

      It’s a super-magic-8-ball that we choose to pretend has agency of some sort. But it does not.