> He's famously a curmudgeon, not lazy. How would you expect him to respond? Not lazily, clearly. You can argue he's not lazy, but this is a very lazy take about LLMs. > Stallman's wider point (and I think it's safe to say this, considering it's one that he's been making for 40+ years) would be that debating the epistemology of closed-source flagship models is fruitless because... they're closed source. You are making that point for him. He is not. He is actively making this fruitless argument . > This criticism is so vague it becomes meaningless. No-one can respond to it because we don't know what you're citing exactly, but you're obviously right that the field is broad, older than most realise, and well-developed philosophically. I don't get what you are missing here then. It's a broad field and LLMs clearly are within it, you can only say they aren't if you don't know the history of the field which is either laziness or deliberate in this case because RMS has worked in the field . I notice he conveniently puts some of his kind of work in this field as "artificial intelligence" that somehow have understanding and knowledge. > embracing them without skepticism in your work That's not a point I'm arguing with. > as we can prove that we think and reason (and I don't think I need to cite this). Can we? In a way we can test another thing? This is entirely distinct from everything else he's saying here as the threshold for him is not "can think and reason like a person" but the barest version of knowledge or understanding which he attributes to exceptionally simpler systems.
↙ time adjusted for second-chance
No ARIA is better than bad ARIA (w3.org)
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