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Culture War Roundup for the week of April 10, 2023

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Inferential Distance part 2 of ?: Minsky's Marvelous Minutia, or why I'm bearish on GPT

This post is a continuation of / follow up to my post on Inferential distance from a month ago, inspired by the recent discussions of GPT-4 and @ymeskhout's comments on prosecutorial immunity. I also feel like this might end up turning into a series, hense the "part 2" and the question mark.

Two things that came up in that previous conversation were a) the apparent differences between thing-manipulators and symbol-manipulators. That is people's whose job, hobbies, day-to-day life revolve around manipulating objects and those whose lives revolve around manipulating symbols/feelings. And b) the question of what constitutes a "hard" social problem, and how/why thing-manipulators and symbol-manipulators seem to have such wildly diverging opinions on that question.

For a bit of context my degree is in math but entering the field as I did, later in life having already spent 12 years in another career, I tended towards the more applied/practical side of the discipline. This tendency seemed put me at odds with a lot of my instructors and fellow students, especially the "nerdier" sort. That is those who were "nerdy" even by the relative high standards of nerdiness expected from someone pursuing an advanced degree in mathematics. for whatever reason showing an interest in applications was kind of looked down upon. To be fair, I did understand where they were coming from. From a young age we're trained to admire the brilliance of guys like Pythagoras, Leibnitz, Newton, Euler, Keppler, Einstein, Et Al. Afterall, why does anyone even bother to study math if not to follow in those men's footsteps and unlock the grand fundamental truths of the universe? In contrast, while the principals of kinematics, control laws, and signal processing, may be mathematically intensive they also come across as very pedestrian. Pure math guys seem to regard them with a sort of casual disdain, the sort of thing you delegate to unpaid interns and teachers' assistants. Meanwhile truth is you can build yourself a pretty good career working on control laws and signal processing, just not in academia.

This brings us to the question of what constitutes a hard problem. If you spend enough time working in robotics or signal-processing, you'll eventually come across Moravec's Paradox. The paradox is best summed up by this xkcd comic from 2014, specifically the alt-text which reads...

In the 60s, Marvin Minsky assigned a couple of undergrads to spend the summer programming a computer to use a camera to identify objects in a scene. He figured they'd have the problem solved by the end of the summer. Half a century later, we're still working on it.

...the "paradox" being that many functions that we consider baseline, and accordingly take for granted, are in fact extremely complex and computationally intensive. Whereas much of what we might label "higher reason" is actually quite simple and requires very little in terms of memory or processing power.

It turns out that it's relatively easy to teach a computer to play chess better than a human or to come up with mathematical proofs that are both novel and correct. And yet, after 60 years, despite the truly massive advances in both hardware and software represented by projects like stable diffusion Minsky's problem remains far from solved. In practice, you can pretty much graph straight line between the simpler a task seems/earlier a it appears in the evolutionary enviroment, to how hard it will be to replicate. Playing chess is easy, Bipedal locomotion is difficult. Bipedal locomotion only seems easy to creatures like you and me because we've been doing it since we were two-years-old, and our ancestors spent millions of years refining the techniques and bio-mechanics that were bequeathed to us as infants.

What does this have to do with anything? My answer is that I feel like a recognition/understanding of Moravec's Paradox is one of the major components of inferential distance between myself and most others both in the rationalist movement, and in academia. It is why I am reflexively skeptical of grand unified social/political theories. and It is also why I remain deeply skeptical of GPT and the oncoming AI apocalypse it allegedly represents.

One claim you'll see guys like Elizer Yudkowsky, Bryan Caplan, and posters here on TheMotte make on a semi-regular basis is that "GPT knows how to play Chess". But if you press them on the topic, or actually look at chess games that GPT has played it becomes readily apparent that GPT makes a lot of stupid and occasionally outright illegal moves (eg moving rooks diagonally, attacking it's own pieces, etc...). What this demonstrates is that GPT does not "know how to play chess" at all. At least not in the same sense that Deep Blue or my 9-year-old can be described as "knowing how to play chess", or AlphaGo can be described as "knowing how to play Go".

Furthermore, once you start digging into their inner workings this lack of "knowing" appears to be a fundamental weakness of the Large Language Model architecture. At the end of the day it's still just a regression calculating the next most plausible word (or in the case of GPT-4 string of words) based on the correlations found in it's training data. Granted GPT-4 is certainly a step up from GPT-3 in terms being able to pass as human. The shift towards correlating longer statements rather than individual words seems to have plastered over a lot of the jarring discontinuities that made GPT-3 generated posts so easy to pick out. In contrast GPT-4 can actually kind of pass for human from the proverbial 50 ft away. Unlike prior GPT iterations, identifying it actually requires a level of careful reading or some sort of interaction.

Eugene Volokh's posts on Large Libel Models probably deserves a discussion of their own but INAL and not really interested in questions of liability. In any case he ends up running into the same issue with GPT that I did. Users here talk about instances of GPT "lying" or "hallucinating" and how to reduce the frequency of such instances, but the conversations inevitably devolve into self-referential nonsense because neither of these terms really describe what is actually happening. In order to "hallucinate" one must first be able to perceive. In order to "lie" one must first understand the difference between true and false. and GPT possesses neither. Simple fact is ask GPT for five examples of prosecutorial misconduct complete with citations and newspaper quotes and it will provide the names of five prosecutors, their alleged crimes, some juicy quotes, and supposed case numbers. However while the names provided might actually be real prosecutors, and the media outlet quoted might be a real outlet, if you actually look up the court records or try to find the quotes you're going to come up short because the example was not something that was pulled out of memory and provided, it was "generated" form the prompt in exactly the manner that a Large Language Model is designed to do.

to be continued...

edit: fixed link

Guys, I think I’ve found the source of the Adderall shortage.


You’re very attached to this idea that GPT can’t model systems, that it has a gestalt of “things a human would do” and pulls out the most common one, conditioned on its current situation. @DaseindustriesLtd has some good reasons why that may not be the case. But you’re missing the forest for the trees.

What does AI need in order to be dangerous?

It gets speed for free. It gets durability, or at least redundancy, so long as anyone can instantiate it. It can capably mimic a human in familiar situations, and because lots of the training data includes humans encountering unfamiliar situations, it can ape our behavior there, too. Does it really matter if it we meatbags can extract an internal conceptual model?

No, the bottleneck is I/O. Hook up current AI to a speech parser, who cares. Hook it up to the early-warning radar and you start to add risk. Hang the global financial system on it, and there will be trouble. We make tools because they are useful to humans. That will also make them useful to an AI which credibly imitates a human.

Sophistry over whether the AI really “knows” what it’s doing will be cold comfort indeed.

What does AI need in order to be dangerous?

"Dangerous" in the sense that aviation or being out on open water is dangerous? Or dangerous in the sense that rationalist usually mean when they talk about the so-called "AI alignment problem"?

Yes.

In the case of the former, nothing. Not only are we already there, We've been here for a century. Computer glitches and poorly designed/understood control functions have been getting people killed as long as there have been computers.

In the case of the latter, agency, and the physical/perceptual capabilities of a kindergartener strike me as the bare minimum.