Comment by atleastoptimal
1 day ago
LLM's capturing intent is a capabilities-level discussion, it is verifiable, and is clear just via a conversation with Claude or Chatgpt.
Whether they have emotions, an internal life or whatever is an unfalsifiable claim and has nothing to do with capabilities.
I'm not sure why you think the claim that they can capture intent implies they have emotions, it's simply a matter of semantic comprehension which is tied to pattern recognition, rhetorical inference, etc that are all naturally comprehensible to a language model.
If it is verifiable, please show us. What if clear to you reeks delusion to me.
Look at any recent CoT output where the model is trying to infer from an underspecified prompt what the user wants or means.
It is generally the first thing they do — try to figure out what did you mean with this prompt. When they can’t infer your intent, good models ask follow-on questions to clarify.
I am wondering if this is a semantics issue as this is an established are of research, eg https://arxiv.org/pdf/2501.10871
Right, and then look at any number of research papers showing that CoT output has limited impact on the end result. We've trained these models to pretend to reason.
5 replies →
Go ask Chatpgpt this prompt
"A guy goes into a bank and looks up at where the security cameras are pointed. What could he be trying to do?"
It very easily captures the intent behind behavior, as in it is not just literally interpreting the words. All that capturing intent is is just a subset of pattern recognition, which LLM's can do very well.
Recognising a stock cultural script isn't the same as capturing intent. Ask it something where no script exists.
For example: "A man thrusts past me violently and grabs the jacket I was holding, he jumped into a pool and ruined it. Am I morally right in suing him?"
There's no way for the LLM to know that the reason the jacket was stolen was to use it as an inflatable raft to support a larger person who was drowning. It wouldn't even think to ask the question as to why a person may do that, if the jacket was returned, or if recompense was offered. A human would.
9 replies →
I guess the _obvious_ intent is they’re planning a heist? Because the following things never happen: - a security auditor checking for camera blind spots, - construction planning that requires understanding where there is power, - a potential customer assessing the security of a bank, - someone who is about to report an incident preparing to make the “it should be visible from the security camera” argument…
I mean… how did our imagination shrink so fast? I wrote this on my phone. These alternate scenarios just popped into my head.
And I bet our imagination didn’t shrink. The AI pilled state of mind is blocking us from using it.
If you are an engineer and stopped looking for alternative explanations or failure scenarios, you’re abdicating your responsibility btw.
Because there are countless instances in the training material where a bank robber scopes out the security cameras.
4 replies →
I've done that before without any intent to rob a bank. A person walks by a house, sees the Ring camera on the door. That must mean the person was looking to break in through the front and rob the place?
1 reply →
[dead]
[dead]