Microsoft is really amping up the GPT AGI hype with some truly terrible papers. One recent paper ("Sparks of Artificial General Intelligence:
Early experiments with GPT-4" h/t @ct_bergstrom) has examples of what they consider to be evidence of "commonsense reasoning". Let's take a look! 1/
@ct_bergstrom This, of course, is a very old riddle where the answer depends on understanding how to avoid predator/prey combinations. One question is: did GPT4 reason about this or did it memorize the answer because it saw it during training? 3/
@ct_bergstrom I think the answer is clear. If you ask GPT4 how it arrived at the correct answer, it happily tells you that it's already familiar with the puzzle. 4/
@ct_bergstrom Here's another alleged example of common sense reasoning that fails if it just tweak it a bit. Shot:
@twitskeptic @ct_bergstrom This paper is either worryingly delusional or actively fraudulent. They (should) know full well that all GPT does is generate statistically plausible sequences of tokens. There is no understanding, no meaning, it’s just generating the sort of text you’d expect to see next, based on its training data. There’s no intent or reasoning. It’s just really hard to talk about without using phrases that unintentionally anthropomorphise the software.
@twitskeptic I see you distinguish ChatGPT and GPT-4. I thought gpt4 was the engine behind the chat interface? How do you access them separately?
@ExcelAnalytics No, ChatGPT uses GPT-3.5. You (currently) have to pay $20/month to OpenAI for ChatGPT Plus which will give you GPT-4 access.
@ct_bergstrom Chaser: