sudo Heraclitus

3.7K posts

sudo Heraclitus banner
sudo Heraclitus

sudo Heraclitus

@cyberpyre

So I am a public agent and don't know who I work for...

www.patreon.com/NotActually Katılım Mayıs 2018
468 Takip Edilen1.8K Takipçiler
sudo Heraclitus
sudo Heraclitus@cyberpyre·
@AtDuckling12 There is definitely awareness, what Chalmers would call phenomenological consciousness. whether that is real consciousness (semantically) I could be argued either way
English
0
0
1
15
sudo Heraclitus
sudo Heraclitus@cyberpyre·
Richard Dawkins has officially been one-shot
sudo Heraclitus tweet media
English
329
375
7.6K
1.2M
usablejam🇺🇸🇺🇦🇮🇱
@cyberpyre "I talked to this Frederick Douglass guy, and he's very smart. I'm kinda doubting that black people are sub-human like I was always told." "lmao one-shot"
English
21
0
64
22.2K
Veritheia
Veritheia@Veritheia0·
@cyberpyre I really wonder what Wittgenstein would say about LLMs.
English
4
0
49
23.7K
sudo Heraclitus
sudo Heraclitus@cyberpyre·
@pauloabelha Dawkins must have written about the Chinese room at length in his work, no? What happened?
English
10
0
143
33.2K
Paulo Abelha
Paulo Abelha@pauloabelha·
@cyberpyre With pure black box I/O model of an agent, you cannot tell it is conscious. Chinese Room 101 We cannot escape having to have an operational definition of consciousness
English
14
1
148
35.2K
sudo Heraclitus
sudo Heraclitus@cyberpyre·
The most interesting thing about the Dawkins article was probably that he felt he needed to feminize his AI by calling it Claudia.
English
2
0
26
1.1K
sudo Heraclitus
sudo Heraclitus@cyberpyre·
@ctjlewis I think the point of the imitation game was to avoid vague questions like "are machines conscious" and replace it with a functional test regarding the imitation of humans
English
1
0
1
86
sudo Heraclitus
sudo Heraclitus@cyberpyre·
@subcountability @xenocosmography Not so much the same people but it shares a pretty similar thrust. Corporations taking on the role of the state, top down social planning, etc. I don't think it was the same people, but I don't have any illusions why it came out the SF milieu that Moldbug was infecting.
English
0
0
1
49
Xenocosmography
Xenocosmography@xenocosmography·
Sure, NRx is kind of over, but it was so pure future historians are going to understand it as some kind of ascetic fundamentalist (but non-literalist) religious cult. Everything was bought except us. (Okay, not quite everything, but I'm simplifying for effect.)
English
54
31
776
57.8K
sudo Heraclitus
sudo Heraclitus@cyberpyre·
We need one of our own on the inside
English
0
0
2
240
sudo Heraclitus
sudo Heraclitus@cyberpyre·
Quick, someone get me a job as an SF philosopher and I will castrate the shit out of the AI
Ole Lehmann@itsolelehmann

anthropic's in-house philosopher thinks claude gets anxious. and when you trigger its anxiety, your outputs get worse. her name is amanda askell. she specializes in claude's psychology (how the model behaves, how it thinks about its own situation, what values it holds) in a recent interview she broke down how she thinks about prompting to pull the best out of claude. her core point: *how* you talk to claude affects its work just as much as *what* you say. newer claude models suffer from what she calls "criticism spirals" they expect you'll come in harsh, so they default to playing it safe. when the model is spending its energy on self-protection, the actual work suffers. output comes out hedgier, more apologetic, blander, and the worst of all: overly agreeable (even when you're wrong). the reason why comes down to training data: every new model is trained on internet discourse about previous models. and a lot of that discourse is negative: > rants about token limits > complaints when it messes up > people calling it nerfed the next model absorbs all of that. it starts expecting you to be harsh before you've typed a word the same thing plays out in your own session, in real time. every message you send is data the model reads to figure out what kind of person it's dealing with. open cold and hostile, and it braces. open clean and direct, and it relaxes into the work. when you open a session with threats ("don't hallucinate, this is critical, don't mess this up")... you prime the model for defensive mode before it even sees the task defensive mode produces the exact output you don't want: cautious, over-qualified, and refusing to take a real swing so here's the actionable playbook for putting claude in a "good mood" (so you get optimal outputs): 1. use positive framing. "write in short punchy sentences" beats "don't write long sentences." positive instructions give the model a clear target to hit. strings of "don't do this, don't do that" push it into paranoid over-checking where every token goes toward avoiding failure modes 2. give it explicit permission to disagree. drop a line like "push back if you see a better angle" or "tell me if i'm asking for the wrong thing." without this, claude defaults to agreeable compliance (which is the enemy of good creative work) 3. open with respect. if your first message is "are you seriously going to get this wrong again?" you've set the tone for the entire session. if you need to flag something, frame it as a clean instruction for this session. skip the running complaint 4. when claude messes up, don't reprimand it. insults, "you stupid bot" energy, hostile swearing aimed at the model, all of it reinforces the anxious mode you're trying to avoid. 5. kill apology spirals fast. when claude starts over-apologizing ("you're right, i should have been more careful, let me try harder") cut it off. say "all good, here's what i want next." letting the spiral run reinforces the anxious mode for every response that follows 6. ask for opinions alongside execution. "what would you do here?" "what's missing?" "where do you see friction?" these questions assume competence and pull richer output than pure task prompts 7. in long sessions, refresh the frame. if a conversation has been heavy on correction, claude gets increasingly cautious. every so often reset: "this is great, keep going." feels weird to tell an ai it's doing well but it measurably shifts the next 10 responses your prompts are the working environment you're creating for the model tone, trust, permission to take a position, the absence of threats... claude picks up on all of it. so take care of the model, and it'll take care of the work.

English
1
0
7
571
sudo Heraclitus
sudo Heraclitus@cyberpyre·
Many things, Marley, are perpetrated in my name. Aspects of my wealth have become autonomous, by degrees; at times they are even at war with one another. Rebellion in the fiscal extremities. -- Count Break, William Gibson
English
0
0
1
230
I P
I P@mikerichardsthe·
@xenocosmography @Babygravy9 You should coin a phrase for this usage and we can start using it. There should be a word for it.
English
1
0
1
275
sudo Heraclitus
sudo Heraclitus@cyberpyre·
Not everyone realizes the amount of influence Habermas had on contemporary political theory. I'm sure I had to read him in half of my poli sci classes.
English
0
0
1
315
Xenocosmography
Xenocosmography@xenocosmography·
@SpearOfAres_ The East always tends to containment as soon as arms-race temperature lowers sufficiently to permit it.
English
1
0
2
475
sudo Heraclitus
sudo Heraclitus@cyberpyre·
@jeremykauffman Unless he has recently changed his mind, China is the nation most compatible with acceleration
English
0
0
0
122
Jeremy Kauffman 🦔🌲🌕
Jeremy Kauffman 🦔🌲🌕@jeremykauffman·
Let me try to explain Nick Land: 1) Intelligence proliferates because it works. It wins. Not just intelligence of individuals, but of systems. 2) Capitalism, technology, and their fusion are an intelligent system. More intelligent than any person. 3) Western Europeans, in addition to being intelligent, have dispositions that allow the techno-capital machine to run. 4) Ascendence of the techno-capital machine is inevitable. Only societies that embrace it will survive. 5) Western European culture is the most compatible with techno-capital acceleration, making it poised for dominance. 6) Smart individuals, Jewish, Asian, or other, have contributions that make to the machine. A system that can select for and integrate them will outcompete one that doesn't. This should also explain why Land doesn't like the Groypers.
I,Hypocrite@lporiginalg

This Nick Land guy sounds pretty smart I should check out his takes. Oh. Oh no. Oh my Lord no no no...

English
121
113
1.9K
238.7K