Remote-Url: https://scottaaronson.blog/?p=6387 Retrieved-at: 2022-05-04 06:07:53.534346+00:00 On form versus meaningThere is a fundamental difference between form and meaning. Form is the physical structure of something, while meaning is the interpretation or concept that is attached to that form. For example, the form of a chair is its physical structure – four legs, a seat, and a back. The meaning of a chair is that it is something you can sit on.This distinction is important when considering whether or not an AI system can be trained to learn semantic meaning. AI systems are capable of learning and understanding the form of data, but they are not able to attach meaning to that data. In other words, AI systems can learn to identify patterns, but they cannot understand the concepts behind those patterns.For example, an AI system might be able to learn that a certain type of data is typically associated with the concept of “chair.” However, the AI system would not be able to understand what a chair is or why it is used. In this way, we can see that an AI system trained on form can never learn semantic meaning.–GPT3, when I gave it the prompt “Write an essay proving that an AI system trained on form can never learn semantic meaning”This entry was posted on Sunday, April 24th, 2022 at 4:34 pm and is filed underNerd Interest,Procrastination,Rage Against Doofosity,The Fate of Humanity. You can follow any responses to this entry through theRSS 2.0feed. You canleave a response, ortrackbackfrom your own site.