necrokuma

3 posts

necrokuma

necrokuma

@necrokuma3

Restarting my profile, only for follow and comment, i not post art again unless the law protect the artist

Katılım Nisan 2026
3 Takip Edilen1 Takipçiler
necrokuma
necrokuma@necrokuma3·
@ChombaBupe Don't judge a book by its cover, but a cover made of poisonous paper is always best avoided at all costs.
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Chomba Bupe
Chomba Bupe@ChombaBupe·
Honestly, no disrespect but if the interview starts with comparing a language model (LM) to a human I consider everything that follows afterwards a waste of time to listen to.
Dwarkesh Patel@dwarkesh_sp

The Terence Tao episode. We begin with the absolutely ingenious and surprising way in which Kepler discovered the laws of planetary motion. People sometimes say that AI will make especially fast progress at scientific discovery because of tight verification loops. But the story of how we discovered the shape of our solar system shows how the verification loop for correct ideas can be decades (or even millennia) long. During this time, what we know today as the better theory can often actually make worse predictions (Copernicus's model of circular orbits around the sun was actually less accurate than Ptolemy's geocentric model). And the reasons it survives this epistemic hell is some mixture of judgment and heuristics that we don’t even understand well enough to actually articulate, much less codify into an RL loop. Hope you enjoy! 0:00:00 – Kepler was a high temperature LLM 0:11:44 – How would we know if there’s a new unifying concept within heaps of AI slop? 0:26:10 – The deductive overhang 0:30:31 – Selection bias in reported AI discoveries 0:46:43 – AI makes papers richer and broader, but not deeper 0:53:00 – If AI solves a problem, can humans get understanding out of it? 0:59:20 – We need a semi-formal language for the way that scientists actually talk to each other 1:09:48 – How Terry uses his time 1:17:05 – Human-AI hybrids will dominate math for a lot longer Look up Dwarkesh Podcast on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify.

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necrokuma
necrokuma@necrokuma3·
@ChombaBupe Nobody wants to remember that in the Victorian era it was also said that the brain worked like a clock-like mechanism, hence various types of automata were created that simulated human tasks, from playing the piano to drawing, it is nothing new. Reductionism always clashes
necrokuma tweet media
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Chomba Bupe
Chomba Bupe@ChombaBupe·
A rock is made of atoms, a human body is made of atoms, therefore a human is a rock. Is the flawed logic folks are using to assume that humans are language models (LM) just because there are very few common things between LMs & humans. A human is not a rock & certainly not a LM
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necrokuma
necrokuma@necrokuma3·
@only1earth_cris @TrueAIHound @ChombaBupe That's exactly why there's a certain focus in the field of AI on facial and voice recognition, motion tracking, and other types of telemetry. Tech companies say they need all that data to "improve their services," but no one said those services were for surveillance.
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