Could be, I do not know. There is a philosophical category for all things and people.Steve often sounds as if he is adhering to the (philosophical stance of) logical positivism, which eventually ran into heavy criticism. No way to avoid philosophy is science. Steve himself is practicing it in this thread.
Logical Positivism
a form of positivism, developed by members of the Vienna Circle, which considers that the only meaningful philosophical problems are those which can be solved by logical analysis.
Now it is, of course, possible to simplify the medium in which a scientist
works by simpliiying its main actors. The history of science, after all,
does not just consist of facts and conclusions drawn from facts. It also
contains ideas, interpretations of facts, problems created by conflicting
interpretations, mistakes, and so on. On closer analysis we even find
that science knows no 'bare facts' at all but that the 'facts' that enter our
knowledge are already viewed in a certain way and are, therefore,
essentially ideational. This being the case, the history of science will be
as complex, chaotic, full of mistakes, and entertaining as the ideas it
contains, and these ideas in tum will be as complex, chaotic, full of
mistakes, and entertaining as are the minds of those who invented
them. Conversely, a little brainwashing will go a long way in making the
history of science duller, simpler, more uniform, more 'objective' and
more easily accessible to treatment by strict and unchangeable rules.
Scientific education as we know it today has precisely this aim. It ismplifies '
science' by simplifying its participants: first, a domain of research is defined.
The domain is separated from the rest of history
(physics, for example, is separated from metaphysics and from
theology) and given a 'logic' of its own. A thorough training in such a
'logic' then conditions those working in the domain; it makes their
actions more uniform and it freezes large parts of the historical process
as well. Stable 'facts' arise and persevere despite the vicissitudes of
history. An essential part of the training that makes such facts appear
consists in the attempt to inhibit intuitions that might lead to a
blurring of boundaries. A person's religion, for example, or his
metaphysics, or his sense of humour (his natural sense of humour and
not the inbred and always rather nasty kind of jocularity one finds in
specialized professions) must not have the slightest connection with
his scientific activity. His imagination is restrained, and even his
language ceases to be his own. This is again reflected in the nature of
scientific 'facts' which are experienced as being independent of
opinion, belief, and cultural background.
It is thus possible to create a tradition that is held together by strict
rules, and that is also successful to some extent. But is it desirable to
support such a tradition to the exclusion of everything else?
As to AI, any AI is a machine created by humans to do tasks. However well it mimics humans it s a machine no more alive than a sewing machine.
Kids are socilzng to AI as if it were a real peron, sometimes with bad conseqinces
Could be, I do not know. There is a philosophical category for all things and people.Steve often sounds as if he is adhering to the (philosophical stance of) logical positivism, which eventually ran into heavy criticism. No way to avoid philosophy is science. Steve himself is practicing it in this thread.
Are we having fun yet?
Logical Positivism
a form of positivism, developed by members of the Vienna Circle, which considers that the only meaningful philosophical problems are those which can be solved by logical analysis.
On the contrary all solvable problems are not solvable by logic(Aristotelian logic) alone. BTW, the theme of the dynamic between Spock and McCoy/Kirk. in Star Trek.
Logical positivism - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
As I said the beauty of engineering to me was something worked as predicted or did not.
There is no philosophy per se to it.
I would identify in general with Freethought, try to to avoid looking through an ideology and see a problem as it is without ideological bias. Of course not possible to do completely.
I did not read about Freethought and then adopt it, my thinking evolved over years of problem solving.
When faced with a problem I did not go looking for a philosophy.
I don’t think much philosophy today is deviated to proving the existence of angels.
That probably only applies if you are able to have your own religious lexicon, and sufficient subscribers to support it. Otherwise religions could be more accurately/commonly described as empiricism, where sensory input supersedes deduction. Preachers rile crowds with "Can you FEEEEEL the spirit!", rarely with "Can you DEDUUUUCE the spirit!". But if there remain deductive questions once they FEEEEL IT!, those can be addressed by the grace of the aforementioned custom lexicon, designed to do exactly that.Never mind angels, theism itself - whole narratives woven around a set of apriori assumptions - appears to be an example of philosophical rationalism.
The implication that AI is going to enable a quantum jump in our means to control our bodies and our environment, seems a little misleading to me. It seems to forget that no matter how “amazing” we may find AI output to be, it is attained by brute force trial and error, enhanced beyond recognition by its speed. That some AI output seems almost mystical doesn’t negate that fact.
The implication that AI is going to enable a quantum jump in our means to control our bodies and our environment, seems a little misleading to me. It seems to forget that no matter how “amazing” we may find AI output to be, it is attained by brute force trial and error, enhanced beyond recognition by its speed. That some AI output seems almost mystical doesn’t negate that fact.
This seems extremely unlikely in the medium to long term.And AI will get better.
Yeah, that is probably right.This seems extremely unlikely in the medium to long term.And AI will get better.
In the short term it would be difficult for it not to; But as more and more training "data" is poisoned by AI generated nonsense, it will become worse and worse - the responses it gives will be more and more plausible sounding, while being less and less tied to reality.
It's going to generate vast quantities of "information" of the lowest quality, and as it seeks out training data, increasingly it will encounter the drivel generated by its predecessors, and this cycle of excremental* change will lead to it dissapearing up its own fundamental inability to think.
* Did he mean 'incremental'?
NO.
Einstein was not ever part of the Manhattan project. He signed the letter to FDR even though he was a pacifist because he feared Germany getting the bomb.
At a mid-July (1939) meeting on Long Island, with Eugene Wigner chauffeuring since Szilard didn't drive, Szilard was surprised to learn that Einstein was still unaware of the chain reaction effect essential to fission bombs and reactors. Two weeks later, this time chauffeured by Edward Teller, Szilard met Einstein again to draft a letter to Roosevelt. The delay, July to October -- explained in Rhodes' book, -- suggests that sending Einstein's letters was not so simple as affixing a postage stamp!Wikipedia said:As queen dowager, she became a patron of the arts and was known for her friendship with such notable scientists as Albert Einstein. :Citation_needed.
Einstein's mind was ... far slower than Jancsi von Neumann ... And he was hardly interested in the details of physics. In all spheres of life, Einstein's greatest pleasure was in finding, and later expressing, basic principles. But Einstein's mind was both more penetrating and more original than von Neumann's.... for all of Jancsi's brilliance, he never produced anything as original [as the Theories of Relativity]. No modern physicist has.
Albert Einstein fled Nazi Germany in 1933 after the Nazi Party's rise to power, fearing for his safety due to the escalating anti-Semitic persecution and the Nazi regime's threats against him and other Jews. He renounced his German citizenship, temporarily sojourned in Belgium, England, and Switzerland, and then settled permanently in the United States, taking up a position at Princeton.
In August 1939, Einstein signed a letter, drafted by Leo Szilard and others, warning President Roosevelt of the potential for Nazi Germany to develop an atomic bomb and encouraging the U.S. to pursue nuclear research. This letter is credited with leading to the Manhattan Project, which eventually produced the atomic bombs.
despite his 1939 letter to President Franklin D. Roosevelt warning of the potential for atomic weapons and convincing the US to start the project. While his theory of relativity (E=mc²) explains the energy released in nuclear reactions, he was not part of the secret program led by J. Robert Oppenheimer, and he did not participate in the construction of the atomic bomb
Despite his critical role in initiating the project, US officials denied Einstein a security clearance in 1940 due to his pacifist nature and perceived left-leaning political views, considering him a security threat.
Einstein Manifesto in 1955, urging governments to find peaceful solutions to disputes and warning that nuclear war threatened human existence. He also viewed his 1939 letter to FDR, which encouraged the U.S. to develop the atomic bomb, as his "one great mistake