(2024-11-05, 11:19 PM)nbtruthman Wrote: Michael Tymn recently conducted a very interesting experiment with a generative AI system. He conducted an "interview" where he asked the AI system a series of very important questions regarding the evidence for survival of death, and how it would explain some notable relevant experiments in this area conducted by a famous psychical researcher in the past. To answer these questions well and thoroughly seemingly requires a lot of intelligent unbiased thinking, the ability to generalize, and the ability to filter out all the strident voices of scientism proclaiming the supposed truth of materialism and the impossibility of an afterlife.
http://whitecrowbooks.com/michaeltymn/en...fter_death
Frankly, I was impressed by the quality of a number of the answers. These answers I think generally made reasonable sense, seemed knowledgeable and amazingly were quite even-handed and unbiased when discussing a matter so steeped in controversy . It was hard to believe this material was generated by a complex non-thinking "thing", by computer Internet data searches and execution of complicated algorithms. There was a strong impression of communication with a rational intelligent agent, I guess only showing how possible (though computationally difficult) it is to fool us. The apparently mostly unbiased even-handed evaluations of the generative AI system are hard to explain especially given that the Internet data it was utilizing contains so much negative and very biased material on the possibility of survival. As for instance Wiki.
The answers did become somewhat repetitive, for instance repeating comments to the effect that scientific acceptance requires repeated demonstration on demand. The AI did correctly note that that this is impossible for the paranormal phenomena indicative of survival. Generally, most of the answers pointed out that the subject matter of survival and an afterlife has a certain body of evidence from paranormal phenomena like NDEs and reincarnation but that this evidence is mostly considered anecdotal or unscientific. It never stated that this negative opinion ignores much of the data and its quality, but the AI repeated the comment that it is controversial and the data is much questioned by science.
The AI system never stated (as I think it would be expected to state) the general prevailing scientistic conviction and "party line" that the subject matter is wish-fulfilling superstition and imagination. You would think that this last answer would be automatically gleaned by the AI from the very extensive skeptical and closed-minded material on survival and an afterlife on the Internet, where paranormal proponents are a small minority.
It occurs to me that it is almost as if the creators of this system deliberately set up pragmatic rules for the AI that it would answer questions on controversial subjects in such a way as not to take a stand one way or the other. So as not to upset too many people?
Also, one question revealed the dreaded AI "hallucination" phenomenon, where a question deliberately citing a nonexistent past experiment was accepted as the truth followed by a comment on this nonexistent experiment.
Notably, toward the end, in its conversational manner the AI even asked Tymn for his own opinions on the subject.
Here are 3 sample questions and answers from the extensive "interview":
From the first sample response which you quoted:
Quote:"However, these experiences can often be explained through neurological and psychological factors, such as brain activity during trauma or altered states of consciousness."
That's clearly inaccurate at best or simply false. Certainly attempts are made to dismiss evidence using those sorts of arguments, but that is not the same as being able to explain them. There are gaps in the logical trail leading from an assertion to concluding that such an assertion is a valid and appropriate explanation.
It seems to me to be regurgitating sceptical opinion there, rather than being at all even-handed.