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Comment by Jensson

3 hours ago

> I think the disagreement doesn’t lie in this concept, but rather in whether an LLM can be used by someone who’s willing to put in effort to assist them in doing so, rather than just having it do it for them

No, you misunderstood here. People aren't saying "it is harder to learn in the future", the issue is "it will be harder to make sure that someone will learn in the future".

Currently you need an engineering degree and experience to do engineering work. However if in the future a lot of people get their degree and experience just by calling LLM for every problem, those engineers will not understand at all what they are doing. Before someone having that experience will have had solved a lot of problems manually on the job, that experience made them an expert. The same person solving those by calling an LLM and pasting in the answer will just as ignorant as someone with no experience.

Most such people today didn't wanna learn to be engineers out of curiosity, they just wanted a job. In the future all such people would use LLM and never learn. Those are the main parts of our workforce, so it is a scary prospect that in the future we cannot force them to learn things properly in the same way since LLM allows them to do basic tasks without learning.

If you argue there are plenty of people who learn for fun, then you would be wrong. Extremely few people learn enough in their own time to contribute meaningfully to for example mathematics, it isn't enough to matter. People learn those fundamentals primarily because they are forced to do it for a degree they need for a job, if they weren't forced to learn and pass tests they would happily go do the job without any knowledge or skills.