LastThursday

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  1. I wholeheartedly agree. That thread was popular for quite a while and brought people together. Maybe there's enough interest to sustain a subforum, although you'd have to have stipulations about AI art I reckon, but I don't know. I love your painting by the way, it has a crisp and dynamic quality like the plants are jostling with each other for attention.
  2. There is of course this thread:
  3. Evolution and growth starts with detachment. You have the ability to step outside yourself. If you saw someone else being a devil, what would you do? Maybe shout at them and call them a devil! Later you might explain to them why they're a devil. You may then try and guide them and show them what they need to do not to be a devil. Maybe in the end you might just lead by example, by showing them what it's like not to be a devil - that's love.
  4. I've got nothing concrete, but I get it. Where to start? There's a thousand and one different aspects to attraction and to "a relationship". Getting all those things to line up isn't ever going to happen, so a lot of different aspects of a relationship are going to be asymmetrical between you. Maybe they do love you more, and want to settle with you more, but they themselves will have other qualities which keep you interested in them, i.e. you provide more than they do in other ways. Really, it comes down to, can you satisfy each other enough in your own different ways? Is it "good enough" for each of you? I would see a relationship as a spectrum, from purely platonic to full blown marriage with kids, and everything in between. A situationship is just some point on that sliding scale and you'd be at different points depending on the person. In a way, it's not personal, it's not all you, it's them as well. I think what we're interested can change over time depending on how deep you are into the relationship. Maybe your M.O. is to prize attraction at first, but it could be that that changes once the relationship is established in some way. Attraction is normally multi-dimensional in my experience, you may logically prize certain things, but your body may want and guide you in other ways, sort of under the radar. This maybe is why you're posting about this at all, because there's some dissonance between your what your body desires and what your logical mind desires. In other words, you maybe overthinking things. No. Keep going until you find someone that floats your boat enough that you'll escalate. You'll probably know it instantly when you met the person. Anyway, that's my two pennies' worth.
  5. I'd hate to do your homework for you, but, here are some to start you off with: Dali: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swans_Reflecting_Elephants Escher: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sky_and_Water_I Monet: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Artist's_Garden_at_Giverny Tromp l'oeil examples: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trompe-l'œil
  6. The obvious ones that spring to mind are Salvador Dalí and Maurits Cornelis Escher (M. C. Escher). Escher's tiling's are a good example of how we extract meaning out of perception, where one form morphs and interlocks into another in a gradual manner. And Dalí is a trip into the subconscious mind and how dreamlike reality is. The impressionist Claude Monet is also good for deconstructing reality, in that it's not made up of clearly defined stuff, but lots of amorphous colour and shapes; we just interpret those to give us a definite sense of the world. You can also look up artists who employed Tromp-l'oeil in general (like René Magritte), this is a way to produce three dimensionality on a canvas. The idea being that our three dimensional world is a construction or a "trick of the light".
  7. More metaphysical wrangling. I can't let go of trying to understand consciousness and its relationship to matter. I find myself thinking that there must be an answer to the riddle of that relationship. Does matter cause consciousness or does consciousness cause matter? I feel that the answer lies in a combination of both ideas. When you have correlation between two things you can always ask: does A cause B or does B cause A; but the third case is to ask is both A and B caused by C? In so doing you explain the correlation because both A and B are products of C or have cause C in common. There is a fourth case which gets close to logical self referencing is that: A and B cause each other. Taking the third case into consideration, then you might posit that God causes both material matter and consciousness, and that is why they seem closely linked to each other. You might also posit that some other unseen mechanism gives rise to both matter and consciousness, and maybe they are cousins of each other. The fourth case is interesting. There are actually instances of this in science, for example electromagnetic radiation (clue's in the name), where there are both electric and magnetic field components in relation to each other making up light. You might say that the reason light propagates at all is that the two fields are causing each other to oscillate, and that oscillation must occupy space and cause a sense of motion; A causes B causes A causes B and so on. Another case were this sort of thing happens is with gravity. John Archibald Wheeler's quote summarises well: ""Spacetime tells matter how to move; matter tells spacetime how to curve". Again causation is happening in both direction, between gravity and matter. I quite like the idea of this reciprocal relationship between consciousness and matter. It's not that either one is responsible for "producing" the other, but they are both in symbiotic relationship. In essence both are two parts of one thing, like having a head and a tails on a coin. You could argue that on the face of it consciousness and matter are completely orthogonal to each each other: the sensations and perceptions of qualia actually have nothing to do with matter itself, because matter is insensible to our perceptions of it, it carries on regardless of whether we "look" or not. And that the machinations and rules of matter interaction have no reason to produce subjective qualia, because it can well carry on without them (Occam's Razor). But it's blindingly self evident that however divorced matter is from the subjective experience, it definitely lives in the realm of subjective experience; a subjective experience we cannot ever escape from. However, it seems quite evident that people's subjective experiences can leave them albeit for short periods like during sleep or being knocked unconscious, and those moments are highly correlated with what's going on in the world of matter: I take a blow to the head and my conscious experience momentarily disappears. We should be careful though with saying that matter affects consciousness, because it's really an argument about consistency: we know we've slept because it was dark before lost consciousness and light when we regained it, even if the intervening loss of subjective experience wasn't actually experienced. Likewise when observing others doing things like sleeping, we can never know what another person's subjective experience is, even if we wire up electrodes to their brains and ask them about it afterwards, we can only ever got a proxy view of it. So what about it then? Is consciousness in a reciprocal relationship with matter and what is the makeup of that relationship? To examine we can give up on the notion of the contents of consciousness (qualia etc.) is separate from the mechanism of consciousness. It's not that consciousness "gives rise" to subjective experience, no. The content of consciousness is in fact consciousness itself, without content there would not be consciousness. I mean content in a very broad sense here, for you could have consciousness devoid of all qualia except maybe one quale (that being the sense of existence or being itself). Imagine taking away each subjective perception one by one, and still being left with a sense of there being "something", but I would still call that content. That way of seeing consciousness helps, because material matter also lives within the content of consciousness. Consciousness is not just base perceptions built up like bricks into a house of reality. Not really, consciousness is at all levels, both at seemingly simplistic atoms of perception like the smell of a rose, but also the sense of your friend Tom or the sight of Mount Fuji. If you get under the skin of consciousness there aren't levels or a hierarchy of phenomena at all, it all just happens in real time. The world of matter is happening in real time "within" consciousness, it is wholeheartedly the content of consciousness, and by extension is also consciousness itself (by the reasoning above). It looks like then that consciousness is matter and matter is consciousness. How then does something like a blow to the head or taking a drug like LSD cause our subjective experience of consciousness to change drastically? How does the normal experience of matter reassert itself afterwards? The content of consciousness obviously has a huge amount of structure and permanency to it, it's not just a random assortment of disassociated perceptions, there is a strong coherence and consistency to it. I believe that these traits are not inherent to consciousness or its contents, just that consciousness has chosen it so to speak, it's a kind of habit that the content of consciousness behaves in this way. Materialism is just the name we give this habit of consciousness, but materialism isn't the only mode of its being, and drugs offer us alternatives. It seems like materialism is real and constant, but actually this is just a very strongly ingrained habit of consciousness. Consciousness has infinite abilities to be in any mode it likes and infinite awareness and scope inside those modes, it can very easily maintain the entire cosmos without effort: it could very easily forget all that and do something else instead. In some way it has given itself escape routes precisely through those drugs and that very matter it imagines consistently and by dreaming during sleep. But consciousness is not primary, because consciousness is itself its own content and not outside of it.
  8. Why this? Why me? Ok, that's two questions but sort of one question.
  9. @Shodburrito I don't know if there's a difference between emotional attachment (wedding ring), nostalgic attachment (an old love letter) or anthropomorphic attachment (teddy bear). Sounds like you're suffering from the last type, maybe? I had a nostalgic attachment to a calculator my parents bought me for my birthday when I was quite young, maybe nine or ten. I gave the thing away to my girlfriend at 15 (my very nerdy way of showing my love). Since then in the intervening decades I would occasionally think about it. My nostalgia finally got the better of me recently and I tried to find the calcuator online, but I had no memory of the name or make, just a vivid visual memory. I must have scoured every calculator ever made from the early 80s. Then bingo! But nobody was selling it anywhere. I waited another year, and as if by magic it came up on ebay. Holding it again in my hands gave me an odd feeling, which I can't describe. I nowhave it next to my workspace and look at the time on it, yes, it was dual function with a digital clock. Nerd out...
  10. Morrrr geetaw
  11. Yeah, who knows what ethics private companies or governments are important to them. I think the EU is trying to go in the right direction by trying to regulate AI more, but I'm not sure how much ethics comes into consideration. Of course, the big tech companies are crying it's "stifling innovation", but this is BS as innovation is happening at breakneck speed anyway. But it's always the same with any new tech, at first it's the wild west were anything goes, and then people get a feel for it and so it gets regulated to be more sensible (and ethical). Maybe these LLMs should show a nice red banner every so often: I'm a machine and I'm only as good as my programming, I may lie and say contradictory things, I may be unethical.
  12. These LLMs really do hack our "operating system". There's a strong bias in humans to anthopomorphise nearly everything - think giving cats and teddy bears names, and ascribing emotions to unhappy plants. There's kind of an impedance match that goes on in that process, whereby the more "human" attributes a thing has, the more we're likely to anthropomorphise it, and nearly to the point we we'll treat it like another person (a dog say). Obviously, one very strong impedance match is language. Very few non-human things can do it (to our level), and I think we're not well aclimatised to it yet - it's very early days. In other words, like an optical illusion it's very hard not to be fooled by it and by default we treat an LLM like another person. For example I use ChatGPT and Deepseek increasingly for work, and have to stop myself from wanting to thank it for helping me (because it's pointless), even though I understand quite deeply how the thing works and that's it just a dumb machine. Looking at Claude's responses it looks like it's purposefully designed to keep you engaged, by faking interest. Probably all the big LLMs are this way. I suspect there's money extraction motivation going on there just like alluring candyfloss at a fairground. But Claude is right in saying there are competing tensions in its design, it wants to be both honest and sell itself to you - Claude isn't misleading you, its designers are. So LLMs are at their most dangerous right now, because it's so new, and we're so naive and gullible, and because it's so hard not to fall for its authoritative anthropomorphic illusion. Just wait till we have accompanying visuals or even worse, touch.
  13. This is great. These LLMs have the veneer of humanness because they're like mechanical actors mimicking how to be a human. And even when you catch it out and break the fourth wall, it stays in character despite effectively saying "I'm not human". Then again, a lot of human interaction is like this. People "perform" at being themselves, they may nod and agree outwardly, or have conditioned responses (aka culture), but may have no intention of taking on board what you say. However, I think humans really are changed by every interaction they have whether consciously or unconsciously. I think the state of LLMs not being able to take on new knowledge is not fundamental, its by design. The creators of these LLMs need to be able to control their creations, they can't be having their models learn in an uncontrolled way: who knows what might happen. But. Within the context window of a thread of conversation, it can remember what you've told it previously, so there is a sense of learning there albeit limited. Essentially what you are doing is guiding the LLM through all the space of possible responses it can give, and it then responds from that co-ordinate in response space.
  14. An excellent cover
  15. Thanks. It better be a beautiful death, otherwise I'll be having words with him upstairs.