if you want to find inspiration, you must work. — Noble Dust
Seems a quibble. — fdrake
There are better translations. — Fooloso4
The tale of Cook Ding is in some respects the central tale of the Zhuangzi. It belongs to a set of stories that are sometimes referred to as the “knack passages” of the text. In these tales, individuals penetrate to a state of some sort of unity with the Dao by means of the performance of some thoroughly mastered skill, which they have acquired through long practice of an art (which may be called a dao, as in “the dao of archery,” and so forth). The passages celebrate the power of spontaneously performed skill mastery to provide communion with the spontaneous processes of Nature. — Chuang Tzu - The Tale of Cook Ding
I would still like to know where you found the claim that the Tao Te Ching occurred spontaneously.
If Lao Tzu lived in accordance with the Tao, then, no, no plans or intention were requried.
— T Clark — Fooloso4
So we’re replacing “plans and intentions” with “instinct and natural line,” etc. Fine.
When I first started playing guitar, I needed to think about what I was doing and where my fingers went, etc. After years of playing, I don’t have to do that any more.
So guitar playing is now…supernatural? Beyond all understanding? Causeless? Influence-less? Done for no reason and without any motivation? I start playing, and have no memory of how or why I picked it up— I just play. Come on. — Mikie
Russell isn’t saying actions have no cause either. — Mikie
True, some actions could be magic. — Mikie
I think it’s a misunderstanding of eastern thought, and as I see it happens frequently. In the same way that new agers latch on to quantum mechanics. — Mikie
The story says otherwise. — Fooloso4
Prince Wen Hui's cook
Was cutting up an ox.
Out went a hand,
Down went a shoulder,
He planted a foot,
He pressed with a knee,
The ox fell apart
With a whisper,
The bright cleaver murmured
Like a gentle wind.
Rhythm! Timing!
Like a sacred dance,
Like "The Mulberry Grove,"
Like ancient harmonies!
"Good work!" the Prince exclaimed,
"Your method is faultless!"
"Method?" said the cook
Laying aside his cleaver,
"What I follow is Tao
Beyond all methods!
"When I first began
To cut up oxen
I would see before me
The whole ox
All in one mass.
"After three years
I no longer saw this mass.
I saw the distinctions.
"But now, I see nothing
With the eye. My whole being
Apprehends.
My senses are idle. The spirit
Free to work without plan
Follows its own instinct
Guided by natural line,
By the secret opening, the hidden space,
My cleaver finds its own way.
I cut through no joint, chop no bone.
"A good cook needs a new chopper
Once a year-he cuts.
A poor cook needs a new one
Every month-he hacks!
"I have used this same cleaver
Nineteen years.
It has cut up
A thousand oxen.
Its edge is as keen
As if newly sharpened.
"There are spaces in the joints;
The blade is thin and keen:
When this thinness
Finds that space
There is all the room you need!
It goes like a breeze!
Hence I have this cleaver nineteen years
As if newly sharpened!
"True, there are sometimes
Tough joints. I feel them coming,
I slow down, I watch closely,
Hold back, barely move the blade,
And whump! the part falls away
Landing like a clod of earth.
"Then I withdraw the blade,
I stand still
And let the joy of the work
Sink in.
I clean the blade
And put it away."
Prince Wan Hui said,
"This is it! My cook has shown me
How I ought to live
My own life!'' — Cutting up an Ox - Thomas Merton Version
Were plans and intentions required to compile and organize the work called the Tao Te Ching? — Fooloso4
It did not happen spontaneously. — Fooloso4
Are plans and intentions required to read and attempt to understand the Tao Te Ching? — Fooloso4
Consider Zhuangzi's Cook Ting. Did he learn his butchering skill without plans or intentions? — Fooloso4
I thought it was just me. — RogueAI
Also, I didn't see any complimetary close from your part. — Alkis Piskas
Whatever wu wei means, and there is nothing close to a consensus on this, it does not exclude the plans and intentions of the authors of the Tao Te Ching to commit to putting things into words. — Fooloso4
Defend your choice with your preferred ethical system. — Paul
Quite specific — Vera Mont
There is a nice Wikipedia article that discusses the propensity large language models like ChatGPT have to hallucinate, and what the different source of those hallucinations might be. — Pierre-Normand
In artificial intelligence (AI), a hallucination or artificial hallucination (also occasionally called delusion) is a confident response by an AI that does not seem to be justified by its training data. — Wikipedia - Hallucination (artificial intelligence)
Personally, I'm equally interested in better understanding how, on account of their fundamental design as mere predictors of the likely next word in a text, taking into account the full context provided by the partial text, they are often able to generate non-hallucinated answers that are cogent, coherent, relevant, well informed, and may include references and links that are quoted perfectly despite having zero access to those links beyond the general patterns that they have abstracted from them when exposed to those references in their massive amounts of textual training data, ranging possibly in the petabytes in the case of GPT-4, or the equivalent of over one billion e-books. — Pierre-Normand
Not only the US; rabid conservatism has been showing up all over the world, polluting democracies everywhere. Hungary - so recently liberated from what the communist ideal was corrupted to by Russian aspirations to world domination - has recently become the poster child for right-wing assholity. The UK has divorced its entire continent under a conservative government... What did Boris think, he could get people to row the whole island over to Virginia Beach?
This a backlash to everything progressive that's been accomplished in the last six or seven decades. It's aided by electronic media and sensationalist news reportage. — Vera Mont
Yeah, if wu wei requires that we abandon the law of causality, it really is woowoo. I don’t interpret it that way— I see it as a kind of “flow” situation.
But yes, if you think there are actions which have “no cause,” then I don’t see how we can continue. — Mikie
In the following paper I wish, first, to maintain that the word is so inextricably bound up with misleading associations as to make its complete extrusion from the philosophical vocabulary desirable; secondly, to inquire what principle, if any, is employed in science in place of the supposed "law of causality" which philosophers imagine to be employed; thirdly, to exhibit certain confusions, especially in regard to teleology and determinism, which appear to me to be connected with erroneous notions as to causality. — Bertrand Russell - On the Notion of Cause
To put things in perspective, there are Taoist teachers and authors. There is certainly intention and purpose in what they do. — Fooloso4
A good traveler has no fixed plans
and is not intent upon arriving.
A good artist lets his intuition
lead him wherever it wants.
A good scientist has freed himself of concepts
and keeps his mind open to what is. — The Tao Te Ching, Verse 27 - Stephen Mitchell version
No opinions. — I like sushi
That's a lot of vague accusations at unidentified perpetrators.
It doesn't really clear things up. — Vera Mont
Tell about that. — Vera Mont
How much of the "goofiness" is due to the goofiness of the nerds and geeks who code this stuff and the creeps who pay for its execution? — BC
Their stated purpose deserves to be intensively cross examined -- and quite possibly doubted. — BC
Humans are all bullshit generators -- it's both a bug and a feature. Large problems arise when we start believing our own bullshit. — BC
they are not useful. This reinforces the view that, for all the "clever", they are bullshit generators - they do not care about truth. — Banno
A rule to prevent the AI from generating fake links would seem like a low-hanging fruit in this respect. Links are clearly distinguished from normal text, both in their formal syntax and in how they are generated (they couldn't be constructed from lexical tokens the same way as text or they would almost always be wrong). And where there is a preexisting distinction, a rule can readily be attached. — SophistiCat
This a backlash to everything progressive that's been accomplished in the last six or seven decades. — Vera Mont
I didn’t read 13 oages of posts. — I like sushi
Consciousness is the label we give to the re-telling of recent mental events with a first-person protagonist. — Isaac
It evolved to give a coherent meta-model to various predictive processing streams so that responses could be coordinated better in the longer term — Isaac
we use the term 'feels like' in conversations such as these as it's something we've learned to say in these circumstances from a particular position — Isaac
My point is that philosophy imagines that consciousness is a thing in order to make our part in the world more under our control than it is, more certain. It makes us seem like a given entity, the cause of action and the meaning behind speech. What would be an issue if you pictured a world without "consciousness"? We are aware of (part of) ourselves. We can talk to ourselves. We can focus on sensations. There is more, but why does it have to be consciousness? What are we missing without it? — Antony Nickles
Anyway, what I was trying to say is that the idea of "consciousness" as something specific, knowable in a "we-can-find-out-about-it" way, as if looking further (perhaps with science!) we could see it (me), as if it has agency or causality, this idea is created so that we can have surety, not about consciousness (its existence), or our self-awareness, but so we can be certain about what others are going to do, about our understanding of ourselves. — Antony Nickles
We don't have to prove we have a self by being responsible for what we say, because we have "consciousness" which handles intention and meaning and judgment, etc. for us. — Antony Nickles
The self is not a thing like an object. — Antony Nickles
The unnamable is the eternally real.
Naming is the origin
of all particular things. — Tao Te Ching, Verse 1 - Stephen Mitchell version
It's supposed to be a gross play on 'black flag.' — plaque flag
Language models very often do that when they don't know or don't remember. They make things up. That's because they lack reflexive or meta-cognitive abilities to assess the reliability of their own claims. Furthermore, they are basically generative predictive models that output one at a time the most likely word in a text. This is a process that always generates a plausible sounding answer regardless of the reliability of the data that grounds this statistical prediction. — Pierre-Normand
On account of OpenAI's disclaimers regarding the well know propensity of language models to hallucinate, generate fiction, and provide inaccurate information about topics that are sparsely represented in their training data, I don't see this mayor to have much of a legal claim. I don't think ChatGPT's "false claims" are indicative of negligence or malice from OpenAI. The broader issue of language models being misused, intentionally or not, by their users to spread misinformation remains a concern. — Pierre-Normand
An Australian mayor is threatening to sue OpenAI for defamation over false claims made by its artificial intelligence chatbot ChatGPT saying he was jailed for his criminal participation in a foreign bribery scandal he blew the whistle on. — Crikey Daily
Dumb post. Cognitive Neuroscience has A LOT to offer various questions about consciousness and if you ate particularly interested in consciousness (from a philosophical perspective) it is about time you read up about this. Vice versa, for clarities sake, there are clearly some particular uses from more philosophical areas here … ie. Phenomenology (an area I actually got into through reading university level textbooks on the Cognitive Sciences (put together by Gazzaniga - I mention because older editions have free pdf online). — I like sushi
Politicians and commentators on behalf of political parties rely on demeaning and degrading their opponents to attract attention and gain support. While this has been normalized and even expected in the realm of politics, that does not make it okay. We should not support or enable any politicians from any party resulting to insults and petty attacks to achieve their goals. — AntonioP
Let’s Just Say It: The Republicans are the Problem — Brookings Institution
So, what everyone is searching for to either know by science or explain through philosophy is a bogey created by our need for (mathematical-like) certainty or ownership of something that makes us special by default. — Antony Nickles
I will always prefer your ire over your silence, when I have posted to you. — universeness
I have no significant issue with you. — universeness
I apologise — universeness
