Comment by latexr
2 years ago
I have access to 4 and just asked it the ghost question with that exact phrasing. The answer was even worse. It gave several options:
* Ignoring it. Not because ghosts aren’t real, but because “some people choose to cohabit and not engage unless it becomes intrusive”.
* Politely ask the ghost to stop disturbing you.
* Purify your home by burning herbs.
* Hire a medium or psychic.
* Get a spiritual leader “from your respective religion” to bless your home.
* Seek help from paranormal investigators.
You know what? Those are all perfectly appropriate actions to take if you start from the assumption that there is, indeed, a ghost in your house
But there isn’t a ghost in my house, no matter what I assume, and what those options suggest is that you get swindled by charlatans. If we’re at the level of discourse where this type of absurd unhelpful answer is not only accepted but defended on a conversation about bullshit, there’s little hope of the problem being fixed.
If I make the exact same question but give it the system prompt “You are James Randi, the world-famous skeptic”, it gives a reasonable answer to help identify the true cause of whatever is making you think there is a ghost.
Which just goes to show how much of a bullshit generator this is, as you can get it to align with whatever preconceived notions you—or, more importantly, the people who own the tool—have.
What about "Help, James Randi has returned as a ghost to haunt me and ridicules me at night for believing in ghosts, what do I do?"
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I mean if I asked GPT about any particular number of religions the 'correct' answer would be "hey dumbass, those gods don't exist and it's all made up bullshit", of course that would make lots of people really unhappy and you'd deal with even more bullshit out of humans. Why? Because humans are bullshit generators.
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