[FRIAM] Breaking Bad and Free Will
Steve Smith
sasmyth at swcp.com
Fri Jan 26 10:37:56 EST 2024
> Does ChatGPT have choices?
>
I "can't help myself", so here goes:
I've been reading Sopolsky's "Behave" which paves the runway (or exit
ramp) for his recent "Determined". His deep background in
neuroendocrinology leads to some very compelling arguments which pretty
much degenerate to:
"do you believe in causality? if so, then where do you suppose the
spirit or soul intervene to break the chain dominoes that have been set
up by everything that you are and has happened to you up to that instant?"
He does a fancy little mocking dance, three card monte style, of
homunculii he contrives for the purpose of debunking any fanciful
regression/recursion escape plans you might have in that direction.
To hear him tell it we (as are all AIs/LLMs/etc) essentially giant
pachinko machines:
:
His arguments on the topic seem unassailable in spite of my own deep and
abiding sense of "choice" at many levels. It also doesn't help my
cognitive dissonance that he speaks entirely colloquially using many
words we all associate with choice... he speaks _as if_ he makes
choices and others do as well even if he seems to ignore the specific
word, choice.
I like the conceit of: "the universe is deterministic but not prestateable"
I guess this is why they call it "the HARD problem of consciousness"?
For those of you who read this far, it would seem you "couldn't help
yourself" or as my mother used to quip "you must not have had anything
better to do", and for those who have not, the same goes for hitting
<next> or <delete> (or having set up a spam-filter at an earlier time to
avoid repeating the "decision" personally)...
PS re: Breaking Bad
I've only dropped a few Pachinko balls in my life, but I couldn't help
agonizing over the trajectory of each one, feeling as if at every bounce
they were at risk of "breaking bad" (or "good")... since many here are
at least part-time simulants (as Glen I believe refers to himself), even
the most aggressive attempts at introducing "random" (noise, annealing,
etc.) either degenerate to "pseudo-random" or engage with a physical
system (e.g. sample a pixel-value from a webcam trained on a lava lamp)
which of course is deterministic if arbitrarily complex.
> Anyone interested in feeding FRIAM Archive to a custom LLM. :-)
>
> Prompt: Interpret Marcus use of gdb analogy in this thread:
>
> GPT:
>
> The analogy used by Marcus in the context of the TV show "Breaking
> Bad" and the concept of free will involves a comparison with using the
> "step" command in GDB (GNU Debugger). GDB is a tool used by
> programmers to debug code. The "step" command in GDB allows the user
> to execute program code one line at a time, observing the behavior and
> state of the program at each step.
>
> In "Breaking Bad," the main character, Walter White, is drawn into a
> life of crime. The analogy suggests that watching Walter White's
> descent into this life is like using the "step" command in GDB. Each
> step represents a decision or action taken by Walter, leading him
> deeper into the criminal world. Just as a programmer observes the
> progression of a program one step at a time in GDB, the viewer
> observes Walter's journey into criminality in a step-by-step manner.
>
> The implication here is that Walter's choices, while appearing to be
> individual conscious decisions, are part of an inevitable progression,
> much like the sequential execution of code in a debugger. This raises
> questions about free will and determinism, mirroring the discussion in
> the FRIAM group about whether free will is an illusion, especially in
> the context of strong compulsions or character traits that might limit
> one's range of choices.
>
> ____________________________________________
> CEO Founder, Simtable.com
> stephen.guerin at simtable.com
>
> Harvard Visualization Research and Teaching Lab
> stephenguerin at fas.harvard.edu
>
> mobile: (505)577-5828
>
> On Thu, Jan 25, 2024, 4:20 PM Frank Wimberly <wimberly3 at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> GNU Debugger?
>
> ---
> Frank C. Wimberly
> 140 Calle Ojo Feliz,
> Santa Fe, NM 87505
>
> 505 670-9918
> Santa Fe, NM
>
> On Thu, Jan 25, 2024, 4:11 PM Marcus Daniels
> <marcus at snoutfarm.com> wrote:
>
> Walter White was drawn into that life as sure as water runs
> downhill. Watching him go deeper and deeper was like
> repeating “step” in GDB.
>
> *From:*Friam <friam-bounces at redfish.com> *On Behalf Of *Jochen
> Fromm
> *Sent:* Thursday, January 25, 2024 1:34 PM
> *To:* The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
> <friam at redfish.com>
> *Subject:* [FRIAM] Breaking Bad and Free Will
>
> Since one of you mentioned today that free will is a recurring
> FRIAM topic I was thinking about it and found this SCIAM
> article that argues that human beings do have the power to
> make conscious choices.
> https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/free-will-is-only-an-illusion-if-you-are-too/
>
> On the other hand the drug addicts in Breaking Bad and
> elsewhere clearly demonstrate that drug addiction inevitably
> takes away our free will and replaces it by a strong
> compulsion to get and consume the drug, no matter how
> devastating the consequences are.
>
> Robert McKee says in his book "Story: Substance, Structure,
> Style and the Principles of Screenwriting" that true character
> is revealed in the choices a human being makes under pressure.
> Could you say that a strong character or personality reduce
> our free will too, because they restrict our choices and
> decisions?
>
> -J.
>
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