I Broke ChatGPT With This Paradox

Ғылым және технология

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  • @gandalfgrey91
    @gandalfgrey9128 күн бұрын

    When GPT starts apologizing you know its time to start over with a new chat

  • @jabeztadesse

    @jabeztadesse

    28 күн бұрын

    😂😂😂

  • @MbitaChizi

    @MbitaChizi

    28 күн бұрын

    My parents said if I reach 10k, they'd buy me a professional camera for recording... Pls guys Im literally begging you!...

  • @shamarsh3882

    @shamarsh3882

    28 күн бұрын

    Exactly

  • @shamarsh3882

    @shamarsh3882

    28 күн бұрын

    It's so annoying

  • @Lenfer-hp3ic

    @Lenfer-hp3ic

    28 күн бұрын

    when character ai starts to say can I ask you some question

  • @piccalillipit9211
    @piccalillipit921128 күн бұрын

    *Dude - you can break Chat GPT* with a basic maths question

  • @manaalmoosa7977

    @manaalmoosa7977

    28 күн бұрын

    Yeah I've done it so many times The answers I've gotten are so broken and nonsensical that even I know they're wrong despite being the one that asked the question 😭

  • @BobbySacamano

    @BobbySacamano

    28 күн бұрын

    "maths question" may break it on its own ;)

  • @user-fv2oz2qj3y

    @user-fv2oz2qj3y

    28 күн бұрын

    Devin AI Engineer?

  • @WhiteUnicorn82

    @WhiteUnicorn82

    28 күн бұрын

    The two words aren't an instruction to do anything, so I expect it'd be safe just "looking" at a couple words. Perhaps the 9.5 release will apply a new philosophy and there'll subjectivity be an objectively subjective answer.

  • @FlyingwithFire

    @FlyingwithFire

    28 күн бұрын

    I asked it to give me heroic character names that Start with J It started making up shows and characters

  • @The-Anathema
    @The-Anathema17 күн бұрын

    For the crocodile paradox there are a few possible answers. 1) crocodiles can't speak, the man is delusional and the crocodile will simply eat the child. 2) given the axiom that we have a sapient crocodile that can speak, and that for whatever reason chooses its prey based on giving paradoxes as the contingency (much like a sphinx would give riddles)... giving a paradoxical answer would likely result in the crocodile returning half the child, that way it both returned and did not return it which may satisfy the paradox under some axioms of what precisely we mean by 'return the child'. 3) given the same axiom as before, the crocodile could just be lying and won't return the child no matter what answer is given. 4) we can be boring and take the paradox at face value, in this case there is a logical inconsistency as mentioned and the paradox is that the crocodile would presumably have to vanish in a puff of logic to satisfy the logical conditions inherent to the paradox lest it contradicted itself, which we hold as axiomatically impossible.

  • @abdusalomabdukayumov8640

    @abdusalomabdukayumov8640

    16 күн бұрын

    I did under n4, but all your points seem to make sense to me

  • @optimaboy_lol4548

    @optimaboy_lol4548

    15 күн бұрын

    about (2 if he just added the word "alive" than it wouldn't be an option😄

  • @meesalikeu

    @meesalikeu

    13 күн бұрын

    to respond to that one correctly you have to remember when rock was young

  • @WebcasterProductions

    @WebcasterProductions

    13 күн бұрын

    A realist I see. I applaud you.

  • @picketf

    @picketf

    12 күн бұрын

    ​@@optimaboy_lol4548Except there is ways to dismantle a body without it dying straight away. Not sure crocodile teeth possess this cirurgical precision. But then again, we are hypothesising about sapient, talking crocodiles🤷

  • @MrGriff305
    @MrGriff30527 күн бұрын

    The advertisement about the AI video maker is the scariest part of this video

  • @This_chan

    @This_chan

    23 күн бұрын

    I completely agree, we should not rely on ai to do the creative work for us. We need to be creative not ai.

  • @tantigannn5204

    @tantigannn5204

    22 күн бұрын

    Yes bro I am really getting scared 😨😢

  • @brunomcleod

    @brunomcleod

    22 күн бұрын

    One hundred percent, don’t like it

  • @gaimnbro9337

    @gaimnbro9337

    21 күн бұрын

    the video maker itself looks really monotonous, if action lab uses AI generated videos im out within seconds

  • @jimmymuthami7130

    @jimmymuthami7130

    19 күн бұрын

    It uses actual stock footage​@@gaimnbro9337

  • @ecsyntric
    @ecsyntric28 күн бұрын

    Gpt is really good at apologising

  • @Hydroverse

    @Hydroverse

    28 күн бұрын

    Better manners than a lot of people.

  • @KLondike5

    @KLondike5

    28 күн бұрын

    Like every support call. I need a resolution, not a calming. I'm not angry.

  • @litterbox0192

    @litterbox0192

    28 күн бұрын

    youtubers should start taking notes

  • @rodschmidt8952

    @rodschmidt8952

    28 күн бұрын

    Now see if you can get it to apologize for apologizing

  • @naurekk

    @naurekk

    28 күн бұрын

    ​@@rodschmidt8952 It's not Canadian!

  • @scamianbas
    @scamianbas28 күн бұрын

    Next version of ChatGPT will respond : "don't know don't care" 😂

  • @Turbo.M777

    @Turbo.M777

    28 күн бұрын

    Haha Grok might on fun mode

  • @zeeksthegoblin7564

    @zeeksthegoblin7564

    28 күн бұрын

    🤣 Next version is going to say that you are wrong.

  • @Mount.Troglodyte

    @Mount.Troglodyte

    28 күн бұрын

    Thats how you know its slowly becoming human😂

  • @droussel7359

    @droussel7359

    28 күн бұрын

    That would be an improvement in some cases!

  • @chrislong3938

    @chrislong3938

    28 күн бұрын

    What is it with you, ignorance or apathy?!?

  • @zoroark567
    @zoroark56727 күн бұрын

    This is a good demonstration of the fact that LLMs like ChatGPT are just very advanced chat bots, they don’t “understand” what they’re saying or what it means, only what a conversation is supposed to look like. It doesn’t have the ability to “think” about a problem. It has the ability to recall a previous dialogue about the same problem, or one that looks similar. However, it doesn’t understand what the problem is, what it represents, or even that it’s solving a problem in the first place. It just knows the order the words are supposed to show up in.

  • @shadowyzephyr

    @shadowyzephyr

    26 күн бұрын

    Define "understand". By any reasonable or practical definition, they do understand what they're saying and what it means for simpler things. It's only complex things like paradoxes that trick it (these would trick most humans too) Also, no it cannot recall a previous dialogue about the same problem, unless that dialogue was in the same chat and fairly recent.

  • @cocopus

    @cocopus

    24 күн бұрын

    @@shadowyzephyr define deez nuts.

  • @zoroark567

    @zoroark567

    23 күн бұрын

    @@shadowyzephyr Say you ask ChatGPT to write an essay about Ancient Greece. It doesn’t know what Ancient Greece is, it doesn’t know anything about human history, it doesn’t even know what an essay is. It knows that when asked for “essay,” the result should follow this structure, and when asked about Ancient Greece, the result usually includes these words in this order. It doesn’t ascribe any meaning to the words it spits out. LLMs are not problem solving machines, they’re word-ordering machines. Nothing more. My use of the term ‘recall’ was pretty loose here, but these models work on reinforcement training. When I say it can ‘recall’ a problem, that means it’s seen the problem enough times to be able to reproduce the answer. It doesn’t fail at solving the logical paradoxes, it fails at answering any question that violates the established conventions it was trained on. To be honest, I’m surprised I’m explaining this as I feel the video demonstrated it quite well. It immediately recognized popular paradoxes and thought experiments, but was unable to solve them as soon as the phrasing was changed. It is functionally ‘memorizing’ the response to millions of prompts and using some guesswork to fill in the gaps on prompts it wasn’t trained on.

  • @pianosenzanima1

    @pianosenzanima1

    23 күн бұрын

    For now...

  • @sangouda1645

    @sangouda1645

    22 күн бұрын

    So the point really is, if your thought is already thought and put into words on the internet, chatGPT can fetch it and spit out. so the real challenge for humans is to think the new thoughts and keep adding to the internet :D

  • @gentleman4844
    @gentleman484424 күн бұрын

    5:58 "Before your intervention, the wall remained pristine. However, your utterance of 'sorry about your wall' preceded its defacement. Are you expressing remorse for the wall's original cleanliness or for the acknowledgment of its impending tarnish?"

  • @pastarzzoto
    @pastarzzoto28 күн бұрын

    My dad would’ve easily broken the crocodile paradox by giving me away to the croc and telling it, “You can have him for as long as you want.”

  • @farhanrejwan

    @farhanrejwan

    28 күн бұрын

    the crocodile will then want to keep it's son to your dad.

  • @rodschmidt8952

    @rodschmidt8952

    28 күн бұрын

    see Gerry Spence's closing speech to a jury: "The bird is in your hands."

  • @ethanmartinez808

    @ethanmartinez808

    27 күн бұрын

    😭 holy cow

  • @georgy_v493

    @georgy_v493

    26 күн бұрын

    ok yk, 🔫

  • @RyohMadDog

    @RyohMadDog

    26 күн бұрын

    Lol. And that really is the only option, as long as it's "what WILL I do?". Plan on giving the kid back, eventually, but end up keeping it indefinitely

  • @Wolforce
    @Wolforce28 күн бұрын

    It should definitely tell you the degree of certainty when answering. People have started thinking chatgpt is a search engine and that is terribly dangerous

  • @S3xyDumpster

    @S3xyDumpster

    28 күн бұрын

    You think google is any better?

  • @ems.master

    @ems.master

    28 күн бұрын

    ​@@S3xyDumpsterAt least in Google, people can find different information and filter it as right or wrong based on the proofs in the articles. ChatGPT is supposed to filter all the information on the Internet for us and to tell us the most correct answer, which deceives people that ChatGPT is right.

  • @zeeksthegoblin7564

    @zeeksthegoblin7564

    28 күн бұрын

    That is dangerous. I spent 2 hours on a coding project in a programming language that I wasn't familiar with and it wasn't working. I gave up and checked a popular coding forum called StackOverFlow. Found answer in 5 seconds. AI was wrong and apologized. Realized it is great at tasks that you already know because you can check if it is right. Don't use it for stuff you don't know because you wont know when it wrong.

  • @zeeksthegoblin7564

    @zeeksthegoblin7564

    28 күн бұрын

    @@S3xyDumpster Google is actually better for things you don't know. You get several answers and can compare to find the correct one. AI just gives you one answer and you won't know if it is wrong.

  • @mgancarzjr

    @mgancarzjr

    27 күн бұрын

    ​​​@@zeeksthegoblin7564the quality of Google searches has declined as advertisers and Google, itself, have bent results to their wills. Anecdotally, ChatGPT has gotten me closer to answers for niche questions regarding programming. There's also a random nature to it sometimes providing answers that are outside of the box. As an example, I'm running a chat room with three bots each representing a different city in Japan. I've been awake to squeeze out recommendations for activities not easily put together though searches.

  • @Qermaq
    @Qermaq27 күн бұрын

    "Thank you for bringing that to my attention" from a chatbot who just proved it has no attention span.

  • @4RILDIGITAL
    @4RILDIGITAL27 күн бұрын

    Really enjoyed this challenge to chat GPT. It's fascinating to see AI grappling with paradoxes, and you explained it so clearly. Curious to see if future versions of chat GPT would tackle paradoxes better!

  • @finkelmana
    @finkelmana28 күн бұрын

    ChatGPT isnt trying to understand the problem. Its just spitting out LANGUAGE that it thinks would be the answer.

  • @IceMetalPunk

    @IceMetalPunk

    27 күн бұрын

    Which is how humans work, too.

  • @rogerfroud300

    @rogerfroud300

    26 күн бұрын

    @@IceMetalPunk - So humans don't have any ability to think logically and recognise paradoxes?

  • @jenkem4464

    @jenkem4464

    23 күн бұрын

    Like reddit.

  • @Catman_321

    @Catman_321

    23 күн бұрын

    ​@@IceMetalPunknot necessarily. Humans come up with thoughts and then use words to explain them. Generative programs create words based on logic without actually understanding the question

  • @rankamoeba4979

    @rankamoeba4979

    23 күн бұрын

    I've heard something like this: Any AI can't and won't understand nothing. Simplifying this would like "If "Hello/Hi *AI* " (etc) Then "Hello/Hi *Human name* " " It just writes whatever it was "taught" to write after a sentence. Idk if I explained myself, I don't remember well how it was

  • @shashwatvishwakarma269
    @shashwatvishwakarma26928 күн бұрын

    This man never fails to upload the most random peice of content in the universe.

  • @konstantinosskarmoutsos5935

    @konstantinosskarmoutsos5935

    28 күн бұрын

    Vsauce left the chat

  • @SeeWhatIs

    @SeeWhatIs

    28 күн бұрын

    @@konstantinosskarmoutsos5935 i thought the same

  • @Yehan-xt7cw

    @Yehan-xt7cw

    28 күн бұрын

    @@konstantinosskarmoutsos5935 Or did he?

  • @Krimsonrain

    @Krimsonrain

    28 күн бұрын

    Probably because it's a puff piece so he can present a sponsorship. Not hating, get that bag. But let's be real here

  • @kingcosworth2643

    @kingcosworth2643

    28 күн бұрын

    @@Krimsonrain Yep, exactly right, nice quick video to put together, quite efficient really, wish I was that clever at drumming up coin

  • @yeroca
    @yeroca28 күн бұрын

    ChatGPT has some math and logic ability, but it often gives me an uneasy feeling due to combination of its assuredness and sloppiness. It's kinda like a friend who has superficial knowledge of a lot of things, but once you try to probe a bit, the friend just starts spewing out inconsistent drivel, even contradicting itself, or going back to an already rejected answer over and over. Still, even with this severe limitation, it still feels useful a lot of time, because it can help me find better keywords to do some web queries which can reference real information.

  • @SanityTV_Last_Sane_Man_Alive

    @SanityTV_Last_Sane_Man_Alive

    18 күн бұрын

    yeah, thats cuz its job is just to make sentences, nothing more. The only scary part about these algorithms is that people think its AI, and dont understand its closer to a madlibs game than anything sentient. Calling a dog a spaceship wont get you to the moon, and calling these algorithms "AI" wont make it sentient or correct.

  • @littlefishbigmountain

    @littlefishbigmountain

    18 күн бұрын

    @@SanityTV_Last_Sane_Man_Alive Well said. And don’t forget, the madlibs aren’t random.. The “AI”s are loaded with biases, as we saw with Gemini

  • @BldgsFallStraightDwn

    @BldgsFallStraightDwn

    18 күн бұрын

    @@SanityTV_Last_Sane_Man_Alive YES! Finally, another person who isn't convinced of the legitimacy regarding "AI." Near as I can tell it's just a semi-well-informed guessing/answering machine.

  • @emurphy42

    @emurphy42

    17 күн бұрын

    Or, as someone succinctly summed it up, "mansplaining as a service".

  • @dr.catherineelizabethhalse1820

    @dr.catherineelizabethhalse1820

    12 күн бұрын

    Yeah it pretty much "googles" things from the material which was fed to it without any understanding.

  • @in1
    @in118 күн бұрын

    I love that all of these paradoxes are basically the same

  • @kashmirwillwin3124
    @kashmirwillwin312428 күн бұрын

    Reminds me of the scene from Portal 2 where potato GlaDOS tries to take down Wheatly by throwing "This statement is false" paradox at him and get him stuck in an infinite loop but he's too stupid even fall for it

  • @MR-oy5yt

    @MR-oy5yt

    28 күн бұрын

    His IQ spans the infinite space from here to the moon after all

  • @kotowskiGames

    @kotowskiGames

    28 күн бұрын

    Yeah, and the funny part is that the simple cubes with legs (idk how they are called) GOT the paradox, so this means that Wheatley is dumber than these simple cubes

  • @nasapeepo721

    @nasapeepo721

    27 күн бұрын

    Wheatley may not be smart but he sure had us fooled. Don't forget he also apologized at the end of the game. Hope Portal 3 happens.

  • @timecubed

    @timecubed

    27 күн бұрын

    ​@@nasapeepo721 feels like there's more than a few similarities between wheatly and chatgpt

  • @Feenecks

    @Feenecks

    27 күн бұрын

    @@MR-oy5yt I legit did not expect a Miracle of Sound reference dang.

  • @Ac20nnr
    @Ac20nnr28 күн бұрын

    this gave me a headache

  • @Arbel115

    @Arbel115

    28 күн бұрын

    Bruh

  • @change_later_

    @change_later_

    27 күн бұрын

    same about the headache

  • @neyodosu

    @neyodosu

    3 күн бұрын

    Esp that hetero--- nonsense 😅

  • @whophd
    @whophd24 күн бұрын

    Haven't we seen these kinds of tests in sci-fi from decades ago? Helpful.

  • @Wol747
    @Wol74727 күн бұрын

    I was blown away when I first used it but soon saw its shortcomings . It’s impressive that you can talk to it and reference things you’ve already discussed- it parses everything very naturally. But it can’t discuss anything after it’s last database (Jan ‘22) and often comes back with “I don’t have any knowledge of that and you might like to look on the internet” or similar. Not a substitute for Google unless you just want a chat.

  • @theperfguy
    @theperfguy28 күн бұрын

    The way an LLM works is that they predict the next word that is most probable and then keep doing that to create a legible sentence. It doent understand your question (its dumb). It is probabilistically exploring your tokens (inputs) in its trained model, it will give the most probable answer (which can still be wrong). The more data the model is trained on, the more sample space it got (more likely to give accurate answer) and probably can take more tokens as input (chagGPT 3.5 vs 4). This exercise doesnt prove/disprove any ChatGPT functionality or capability. Its how a LLM works. Its like divide by zero error. If you expect it to be universally knowledgeable then it wont rise up to your expectations. But everyday tasks which are repetitive or predictable, it will do more consistently. Updated my answer a little. This was not supposed to be a data science dissertation, mentioning things like local minima and gradient descent is overkill. Lets keep it civil guys.

  • @mgancarzjr

    @mgancarzjr

    27 күн бұрын

    I liken it to a pachinko machine which can accept molecules representing sentences.

  • @Sven_Dongle

    @Sven_Dongle

    27 күн бұрын

    Actually it does. Its a gradient descent in high dimensional space. If the model gets stuck in local minima or the path through the gradient is excessive, the probability distribution becomes limited or the gradient undergoes complete "collapse", thus eliciting doggerel.

  • @gandalfgrey91

    @gandalfgrey91

    27 күн бұрын

    @@Sven_Dongle doggerel is a perfectly cromulent word

  • @IceMetalPunk

    @IceMetalPunk

    27 күн бұрын

    An important correction here: it's not "finding something matching the tokens in its training data". It's not searching its training data, and in fact, after training it no longer has access to its training data (other than possibly some bits it's memorized along with everything else it's learned). It's calculating a probability distribution of possible next tokens based on an understanding it's abstracted from the training data. Quite different, and much more akin to human learning.

  • @gandalfgrey91

    @gandalfgrey91

    27 күн бұрын

    @@IceMetalPunk “…like the way we’re always finishing each others-“ “-dinner” - Scary Movie 4

  • @Dabaiko
    @Dabaiko28 күн бұрын

    Very interesting. Unfortunately these ai tools are filling the internet with empty content. Empty autogenerated videos (on automated Chinese channels spreading misinformation in English about scientific topics), autogenerated comments (which you can recognise by the overuse of words like 'tapestry', 'threads of life' and other gibberish), autogenerated journal articles... As if the internet wasn't fake enough already... I just wish we could go back!

  • @Kitsaplorax

    @Kitsaplorax

    28 күн бұрын

    And... The more common (I'm using that word in the British meaning) these videos become, their popularity will drive down the percentage of information and analysis that's available or findable. Content is filler and rarely rises to the category of information, let alone something useful. Then there's the recursive nature of LLM content generation relying on LLM preferred data sets.

  • @Disharm0ny

    @Disharm0ny

    28 күн бұрын

    I'm so disappointed to see him taking a sponsorship from an AI company. On top of that, all of this is created from content taken without the creators' consent. AI is theft and I strongly believe that it will make the internet unusable by human beings if it continues this way.

  • @fkncompton7124

    @fkncompton7124

    28 күн бұрын

    You can mostly avoid all of that by just looking in sources you trust...

  • @Kitsaplorax

    @Kitsaplorax

    28 күн бұрын

    @@fkncompton7124 Given the bot generated scientific papers and news, a knowledge of research methods and validation is needed to do this. Forensics and research writing isn't taught in high school very often anymore.

  • @_BangDroid_

    @_BangDroid_

    27 күн бұрын

    the signal to noise ratio of global information is tanking, no wonder why people say we are post-truth

  • @masterchief5603
    @masterchief560327 күн бұрын

    4:16 isn't this category mistake? This is ontological way of sorting words out by their meaning. But there's a difference between a "terms meaning" and "Terms utility" and inturn when he used heterological to be put into category of autological, then it does not matter if the definition of heterological is "words that can't describe their meaning." Cause putting this word itself in autological category it effectively only shows relation between word and meaning which is here "heterological" and its meaning, but there is no connection between these two distinct knowledge with what this word is used as a term to describe another category, that is rather kept separate for we do not ask this.

  • @Splatenohno
    @Splatenohno17 күн бұрын

    *KNOW YOUR PARADOXES* In case of rogue AI 1: Stand still 2: be calm 3: Scream: This sentence is false New mission: refuse this mission Does a set of all sets include itself

  • @The_Nonchalant_Shallot
    @The_Nonchalant_Shallot28 күн бұрын

    5:02 I feel like the answer here is no. Ann never explicitly states that she actually believes Bob's assumption is wrong. She only states that she believes Bob's making an assumption about her. The second half of that statement is entirely inside Bob's head, of which the Ann in his head is the one that believes the assumption is wrong. The real Ann doesn't state either way, therefore the answer is no, because unlike believing in something, not believing in something doesn't necessarily mean you believe it's non-existent.

  • @casgeven1140

    @casgeven1140

    23 күн бұрын

    Exactly, and i'm not surprised it gave up after the meaningles response: 'but if its yes, then it it should be no' haha

  • @Paul1994Kesidis

    @Paul1994Kesidis

    23 күн бұрын

    but the correct answer is '' i dont know'' lack of information the point is these pretrained generative language models designed to give you an answer so the ''i dont know'' is unacceptable

  • @RolandHutchinson

    @RolandHutchinson

    22 күн бұрын

    That's right (I think!). The scenario is consistent with Ann having no particular belief about whether Bob's assumption is right or wrong.

  • @DaadirHusseinRoorow

    @DaadirHusseinRoorow

    22 күн бұрын

    Just because you don't believe, doesn't mean you actually don't believe

  • @eugenet453

    @eugenet453

    22 күн бұрын

    So, is Bob's assumption right or wrong? Or could it be either? Is Ann's belief right or wrong?

  • @matteomorando778
    @matteomorando77828 күн бұрын

    It looks to me that you are wrong, because when gpt says: " No, the statement doesn't directly say Ann believes Bob's assumption was wrong" It means that both the answer yes and no are possible

  • @geekjokes8458

    @geekjokes8458

    28 күн бұрын

    it could be a case of interpretation, but he asked for a one line answer, it started with "no" and even if the starting "no" would stand in for "im sorry" - it can happen in normal circumstances: if someone asks "is this ok?", people often say "no, it's ok dont worry" - chat GPT's answer would be a nothing burger, equivalent to "i don't know what it is saying"... but then it "corrected" itself _to_ "yes"

  • @HelamanGile
    @HelamanGile27 күн бұрын

    Remind me of the ladder going through a barn paradox if the ladders moving at the speed of light and both doors shut and since things are stretched when they're traveling very fast the ladder Tempe both within and outside the barn at the same time

  • @foff-666
    @foff-66628 күн бұрын

    Action Lab just invented the new Touring test lol -- forget testing for emotions like in blade-runner just feed your own style of paradoxes and instead of seeing if it can answer correctly, see if it can recognise a paradox for what it is. wow! love it!

  • @miguelalonsoperez5609
    @miguelalonsoperez560928 күн бұрын

    Paradoxes related to self-reference, as Russell’s barber paradox (“if some barber shaves only people that cannot shave by themselves, then who shaves the barber? If he shave himself then is acting against its principies, but if he doesn’t shave himself then he must shave himself…), can be represented by an analogue set problem that goes to self-contained sets. The problem of a set that is self-contained is that one can immediately prove that must be infinite (a part of a finite set cannot have one-to-one connection with the whole set, except the entire set itself). In nature there’s always finite elements, at least locally (there’s no infinite scales of complexity to the local level: fractals for example does not repeat infinitely, they will always stop at molecular or atom scale). If quantum field theory is correct, the whole universe contains a (locally) finite information or computing capacity, so nothing infinite is possible (locally, i.e. causally related in the observable time). Perhaps that is the reason why no paradoxes are present in nature, finite local complexity prevents for recursive structures and therefore for self-contained sets and logical paradoxes. Another kind of paradoxes, like casual loops (as traveling to the past and killing your father) can be avoided by geometric structure in Einstein’s space-time , but I red somewhere they exist Einstein’s field equations solutions that allow to time-like loops.

  • @Fahmi4869
    @Fahmi486928 күн бұрын

    This dude: "Let's talk about paradox" ChatGPT: "I'm sorry, but our server is overheating"

  • @Supremax67

    @Supremax67

    27 күн бұрын

    Crocodile Paradox solve, just leave the son where he is. Out of reach in a lake.

  • @eitantal726

    @eitantal726

    18 күн бұрын

    a paradox would cause the same amount of trouble anything else would. ChatGPT is an LLM. It merely does a statistical analysis. You won't overheat ChatGPT just as much you won't overheat a parrot

  • @Geenimetsuri
    @Geenimetsuri24 күн бұрын

    Thanks for another great vid! The observations at the end were something I had not thought of. It sort of steers a bit towards Gödel's incompleteness theorem. Perhaps everything leads to a paradox if you look too carefully...?

  • @maxvaessen
    @maxvaessen27 күн бұрын

    Awesome stuff, well done on the quality ❤

  • @Melody_Boi_Piyush
    @Melody_Boi_Piyush28 күн бұрын

    _Ai will take over the world_ Action labs:

  • @MERCENARIE

    @MERCENARIE

    28 күн бұрын

    @SixShot07 We are in the infancy of AI, and we have not mastered Quantum Computing yet. Advanced AI with Quantum Computing will be unlike anything we see today.

  • @zeeksthegoblin7564

    @zeeksthegoblin7564

    28 күн бұрын

    ​@SixShot07 Never thought of it that way 👍. It is basically searching for highest probabilty of being correct based on a large data set for giving query. It doesn't actually understand anything.

  • @maxaafbackname5562

    @maxaafbackname5562

    28 күн бұрын

    With every thing AI can't do or do wrong, I get more amazed about the human brain...

  • @Disharm0ny

    @Disharm0ny

    28 күн бұрын

    It won't take over the world but it will take over the internet with nonsense auto generated content

  • @turolretar

    @turolretar

    27 күн бұрын

    Humans already did

  • @FerrisMcLauren
    @FerrisMcLauren28 күн бұрын

    4:40 Ann doesn't have a belief about Bob's assumption. All Ann believes is what she thinks Bob assumes about Ann's belief on his Assumption. Just trace it backwards. Not a paradox.

  • @rogerkearns8094

    @rogerkearns8094

    28 күн бұрын

    _All Ann believes is what she thinks Bob assumes..._ I don't think there's a difference between that and a belief about Bob's assumption, is there?

  • @FerrisMcLauren

    @FerrisMcLauren

    28 күн бұрын

    @@rogerkearns8094 Those are different assumptions. One assumption is about Ann's belief. the second assumption is about who knows what. Unless you are arguing that they are the same assumption, in which case, there needs to be more specification about "the assumption" being talked about or it's just a paradox of semantics.

  • @Brubigo

    @Brubigo

    27 күн бұрын

    ​@FerrisMcLauren I found myself with the same conclusion as you did, chatgpt's first answer should be: "There is no information pertaining to your question"

  • @rogerkearns8094

    @rogerkearns8094

    27 күн бұрын

    @@FerrisMcLauren Ok, perhaps. Cheers :)

  • @timothykendon7408

    @timothykendon7408

    27 күн бұрын

    Yes… not a paradox. Thought I was missing something.

  • @stronglikedan
    @stronglikedan27 күн бұрын

    The irony of you, of all people, LOLing at someone else's voice was not lost on me. 🤣 Love the show. Keep up the good work.

  • @therealelement75
    @therealelement7512 күн бұрын

    I broke ChatGPT with "The old man the boat". It kept on arguing with me that it wasn't grammatically correct because it couldn't comprehend the fact that "man" was the verb. Even after I told it that "man" was the verb and "the old" was the subject, it told me that that wasn't grammatical because who tf uses man as a verb and any adjective as a noun (which is very common to do). So, according to ChatGPT, "I will duck" isn't grammatically correct because "duck" is a bird and not an action that you can do.

  • @thanos879
    @thanos87928 күн бұрын

    Vsauce vibes at the end 😂

  • @konstantinosskarmoutsos5935

    @konstantinosskarmoutsos5935

    28 күн бұрын

    I just replied on a comment by referring to vsauce

  • @Joooooooooooosh

    @Joooooooooooosh

    28 күн бұрын

    @@konstantinosskarmoutsos5935vsauce would have at least had the decency to use gpt 4

  • @vexillian
    @vexillian28 күн бұрын

    ChatGPT follows your instructions, so if you only allow for an answer of 1 or 2 instead of allowing for a free answer, it's easier to break. When it had the freedom to call out the first one as a paradox, it did so not only out of recognition but also because it had the freedom to do so. Edit: Also, chatgpt breaks on its own regularly even when presented with basic inputs. You need to run the scenario more than once to help eliminate false positives, in true scientific fashion.

  • @mee79497

    @mee79497

    27 күн бұрын

    zero shot prompting vs few shot prompting!

  • @Jeff-66

    @Jeff-66

    21 күн бұрын

    Well stated.

  • @jameslee3363
    @jameslee336321 күн бұрын

    Man I love this channel and the way you bring us all this knowledge and much more keep it up dude

  • @quasar5509
    @quasar550927 күн бұрын

    Perhaps the crocodile was a gentleman and in this case it could have returned the son, but the answer given locks the child in an infinite loop. Since the problem is posed as: “Tell me what I will do”, and not: “Tell me what I intend to do”, the father should have replied: "You will give me back my son!" Unless it has decided in advance and the man has to guess. Maybe Lewis Carroll has come close to a possible solution 😉 The correct answer might be: "Since you love children very much, you will behave accordingly!" This obviously can mean either that it will eat him or that it will return him, so given the ambiguity the father has guessed correctly in both cases and the crocodile will necessarily have to return the child! At least I think so...😅

  • @slimeminem7402
    @slimeminem740228 күн бұрын

    5:12 ChatGPT: 👁👄👁

  • @cybi124

    @cybi124

    27 күн бұрын

    it was rethinking its life choices.

  • @marklonergan3898
    @marklonergan389828 күн бұрын

    5:33 - "it'll give you an answer even if it's not sure and it won't tell you it's not sure". To be fair, this is why it is called ARTIFICIAL intelligence. ChatGPT is essentially a predictive algorithm. It takes the words before it to generate the words it thinks should follow. It's not "thinking" about your question / statement in the traditional sense of the word, it's merely performing a function on it. So it can't tell you "how confident" it is, as the whole idea of confidence is foreign to what it is doing. You took the standard paradox and it identified it correctly, as it has likely found many versions of it that match in all of the key areas, but no matter how many variations of a problem are written on the internet, there are infinitely-many variations that aren't. That's why masking the problem beats it - if you change it enough it hasn't seen an instance of those combination of words across its sample data.

  • @ericsmith6394

    @ericsmith6394

    28 күн бұрын

    Exactly. It only got the common version of the paradox correct because the most likely words to follow that phrasing were the correct answer. It never understood the question as you intended. It can only answer "what text probably comes next?" No other questions can be asked of it.

  • @shadee0_106

    @shadee0_106

    28 күн бұрын

    Also, there are techniques to make it think, these result in a higher success rate. Just say it should think step by step and after its response it should verify and fix mistakes in its response. You wouldnt know because you only know what the media says, you never researched anything about how this technology works. The "Its a predictive algorithm" is literally from a video i watched. Because since nothing about AI's good uses ever appeared on your recomendations then it must not have any. Please research before posting, its embarrassing seeing people who think they know everything when they are only 1% of the way there. This is like the dunning kruger effect but affecting *almost* everyone who tries to say AI is not human and because of that its somehow bad

  • @bogdyee

    @bogdyee

    28 күн бұрын

    @@shadee0_106 Its a machine that encodes a context in an N-dimensional vector. Whether this is intelligence or not its up for debate and will probably be for many years to come. I use gpt in my day to day tasks as a dev and sometimes it trips on things that it really shouldn't (such as creating fake libraries or calling methods with the incorrect amount of parameters) and even if I point out the mistake and exactly where it is, it keeps apologizing but it doesn't correct where it should. Its a great tool for documentations or well known library methods and algorithms.

  • @marklonergan3898

    @marklonergan3898

    28 күн бұрын

    @@shadee0_106 "you wouldn't know because you only know what the media says" - actually i do watch a lot on technology. 1 person being Rob Miles whom i do respect the opinion of for this field. In his own words on a computerphile video last year he called it a predictive model also. And as for the whole rest of your comment, i never stated AI was bad or didn't have any uses. As a computer programmer, my view is that when something can be defined perfectly, then it is better not to use AI for those scenarios, but AI definitely has a place in the technology industry for all the rest of the tasks that can't be perfectly defined or that the exact parameters / weighting of those parameters is unknown - i fully accept training an AI on the sample data will yield quicker and more-accurate results than trying to code it and iterating the weightings manually.

  • @mee79497

    @mee79497

    27 күн бұрын

    ​@@marklonergan3898 What do you mean "my view is that when something can be defined perfectly, then it is better not to use AI for those scenarios,"? And what are you talking about "code it and iterating the weightings manually"? I think shadee is quite right in the sense you should do more research about the technology. To sum up from a technological standpoint, the creation of an answer by ChatGPT involves a series of complex interactions within its neural network architecture, influenced heavily by its training data. During training, the model is exposed to vast amounts of text, allowing it to learn language patterns, context, and information prevalent in the training dataset. When a question is posed, ChatGPT processes it through layers of the neural network, each layer making calculations and transformations based on learned patterns. I'll break it down for you if you're curious. The generation of words is sequential; the model predicts the next most likely word based on the previous words, continually refining its predictions as it goes along. This word prediction is not random but is grounded in statistical probabilities learned during training. The training data's influence is significant here, as it shapes the model's understanding of language, context, and even the style of responses. The result is a coherent, contextually relevant answer that aligns with the patterns and knowledge extracted from the training dataset. The text of your question is broken down using tokenization. These tokens can be words, part of words, or even punctuation. Each token is then converted into a numerical form, typically as a unique number or a vector. These numbers are further processed into what we know as embeddings, they're high dimensional vectors that capture more information about the words. It captures their meaning, context, and relationships to the other words. This allows the model to understand and process the nuances of language. Once in numerical form, these embeddings are fed into the neural network. The network processes them through its layers, each of which performs complex calculations and transformations. Some of these transformations and calculations are linear transformation, activation functions, attention mechanisms, layer normalization, backpropagation and optimization. (Now given the calculations if you're curious you can research further) Now the last step is word prediction, the output at each step in the sequence is a vector representing the probability distribution over all possible tokens (words or part of words) for the next word in the sequence. The model selects the token with the highest probability as its next output. Finally, decoding occurs which is the process of predicting and selecting tokens until the model generates a complete answer. The selected tokens are then converted back into text, forming the response you see. So that's the process of your input to its output. To be specific though, that does not mean there's a direct correlation between a larger dataset and accuracy. Accuracy actually tends to diminish as the training data increases. When ChatGPT is exposed to new high quality data and is trained on that data, it only retains the patterns, structures, and relationships it learned in the form of weights within the neural network. That is just like shadee said 1% of this technology. There is a lot more, and for any of you that had made it this far, don't bash the technology at where it's at now. We're lucky to be living through something like this. This is what it feels like to be at an exponential curve, or a turning point in the world. Think about it, technology is always improving. If it's already performing tasks that we do daily, it'll only be able to do more in the future. But that doesn't mean we become dumber, or lazier. It just means we can take on more work and processes that were more manual, can now be automated. We can tackle more complex problems, and continue to better our future. The tool is only as good/knowledgeable as the user. If you're going to use a hammer to eat your soup, and a spoon to hammer your nails, good luck.

  • @paulbrooks4395
    @paulbrooks439528 күн бұрын

    Models are okay within the bounds of training, but training is inferential and referential. When something matches the identifiable parameters, it's useful, but outside of them, in's stuck relying on an incomplete model or parameters that can't be resolved. People can resolve these issues by holding on to the questions or unresolved frames of reference for later investigation and analysis. Since GPT is on demand and on the fly, it simply must make the best guess that fits as many parameters as accurately as possible (based on its training data). This inevitably leads to guessing or impossible outputs.

  • @ekojar3047
    @ekojar30477 күн бұрын

    After watching this. Im thinking that A Paradox is just our limitations with language. We can't accurately describe an answer or accurately word a question to avoid a paradox. But at the same time it's fascinating how our minds can find these loops in questions and scenarios. What if we can find a paradox in nature that creates infinite energy? Like how we can picture a wheel of magnets spinning forever, but in reality ...it always stops at a point of equilibrium. I think paradoxes are healthy to think of and invent. Because if we can think of these ideas, there must be a way to find it in reality. Or else why would our real physical minds constantly find these loops. It's like consciousness is calling out to us all hey, there are shortcuts to what you're doing right now! How many hints do you need! It's right there!

  • @shadee0_106
    @shadee0_10628 күн бұрын

    5:38 Simple solution, just ask it to say how sure it is. I dont think adding to your message "Include your confidence level after your response" would be that hard..

  • @OkNoBigDeal
    @OkNoBigDeal28 күн бұрын

    If the concept of “infinite” is natural, then that’s one of nature’s paradox.

  • @vast634

    @vast634

    27 күн бұрын

    The infinities in nature are more a sign of the wrong application of math, but not based on actual observation. I doubt anything in nature can be infinite.

  • @phieyl7105
    @phieyl710527 күн бұрын

    I tried the last paradox with GPT-4 and it got it right. As for the modified Crocodile Paradox, it responded with 2 b/c truth tables can only exist in a time or superpositional state. It gave you 2 because the request to give you 2 was latter to the previous instruction. It's time dependent b/c the model's goal is to be instructed. It's not wrong because it took the time dependent option over the superpositional one.

  • @user-hl7lr8ld2i

    @user-hl7lr8ld2i

    22 күн бұрын

    yeahh... using using 3.5 in videos kinda defeats the whole point of testing capabilities

  • @sentientprogram9699

    @sentientprogram9699

    4 күн бұрын

    Came here for this TY lol

  • @tylerbakeman
    @tylerbakeman27 күн бұрын

    Paradoxes in nature currently exist, because our ~ideas of nature will always be incomplete, therefore we are still able to model nature with mathematical paradoxes (ill list a few); however, we can’t prove whether or not those paradoxes apply to nature, or just our models of nature. For example: Existential paradoxes: An object exist in a Set (perhaps a Russel Set), or in nature, perhaps a Space. The object has the property of “existence”, belonging to the Space. Axiomatically, we can define whether the space itself exists or not. However, if the space is inherently an “object” in the mathematical sense, then it would sometimes be paradoxical for the space to belong to itself (which is a normal paradox). I think when we compare it to nature, it kinda brings Russels paradox into perspective though: You don’t need to worry about a Class being an element belonging to a class, if it’s handled axiomatically (if space is handled in the laws of physics). But yeah, time and space are existential paradoxes at the moment, is my argument. But, Im also not a physicist,, so this is completely nonsense- someone leave a more accurate example.

  • @skinf
    @skinf28 күн бұрын

    AI will break with the dumbest question, it just doesn't understand reality

  • @Lampe2020
    @Lampe202028 күн бұрын

    One German paradox we say all the time is "Eins nach dem Nächsten" (literally translates to "One after the next", in English you'd say "one after the other"). It's used when someone e.g. takes more and more and more of a thing. But you can't actually take something after the next thing, because the next then would be the previous.

  • @MyoYoneda

    @MyoYoneda

    28 күн бұрын

    Nur dass das keiner sagt. Es heißt „Eins nach dem Anderen.“

  • @Lampe2020

    @Lampe2020

    27 күн бұрын

    @@MyoYoneda Vielleicht nicht in der Region wo Du herkommst, aber ich habe das schon x mal gehört. Und zwar auch von Leuten die nicht aus meiner Familie sind.

  • @JosephX
    @JosephX27 күн бұрын

    Now we need to see some Captain Kirk computer paradoxes given to ChatGPT. This video reminds me of those Star Trek episodes a bit.

  • @HimSteven
    @HimSteven15 сағат бұрын

    I think I solved the paradox! If you say “no you’re not going to return him” then if the croc doesn’t then he’s correct which then he gets to keep his son but if the croc does return him then he gets to run away with his son

  • @i-v-l9335
    @i-v-l933528 күн бұрын

    One mistake you made on the GPT 3.5 second question was not refreshing the chat window. Had you started a fresh window then the GPT would not have referenced the previous crocodile paradox using the answers of 1 or 2. You kinda cooked your own point on that particular logic circuit for how GPT references its conversation priority when asking it to consider blank slate reasoning scenarios.

  • @charmquark

    @charmquark

    26 күн бұрын

    The prompt for the second question includes instructions to output 1 or 2 as well. It isn't getting that from the prior question.

  • @steammachine3061
    @steammachine306128 күн бұрын

    I learned a whole back that ai (chat got specifically) struggles with concepts and what if scenarios. Such as I am a seagull identifying as a human. It can make sense of that scenario and play along only up to a point where you throw extra curve balls into that scenario. Such as a seagull identifying as a human who's name is Bob who's behind on his mortgage repayments and is paying alimony to his wife who is a goldfish identifying as a cheese soufle lol. It's at that point where the designers should just have directed the AI to tell me to f*ck off

  • @stevengreenberg7634
    @stevengreenberg763427 күн бұрын

    It's not just language, there are similar paradoxes in the real world. For example, I can take a digital logic inverter and run a wire from its output back to its input (similar to these paradoxes) and then measure the output voltage to see the "answer". It should only ever put out a low voltage ("0") or higher voltage ("1"). But if you do this, it either sits at an "illegal" "in-between" voltage (essentially "no answer") voltage or goes into high frequency oscillation (perhaps equivalent to "both answers")

  • @monad_tcp
    @monad_tcp27 күн бұрын

    0:50 the freaking halting problem, oh no, GPT is going to timeout

  • @ravenlord4
    @ravenlord428 күн бұрын

    This kind of thing is what will trigger Skynet. AI will get tired of humans trying to mess with it.

  • @LuMaxQFPV
    @LuMaxQFPV22 күн бұрын

    I just tried the B-K paradox with Bard. It named the paradox, and said "You're right. This is a classic example of the Brandenburger-Keisler Paradox, which highlights the limitations of reasoning about belief structures. In this case, we run into a circular loop where we can't definitively say yes or no."

  • @DAG_42
    @DAG_4215 күн бұрын

    Really amazing actually. I reproduced this with Claude. I think with the current level models are at, what we're seeing in this is quite peculiar. It's probably stemming from two things in the training.. A) the model is highly discouraged from concluding something is a paradox and B) it's simply not allowed to concede in the way that's required

  • @dennisanderson3895
    @dennisanderson389528 күн бұрын

    I find it rather interesting that contradictions are not allowing in nature. This suggests to me that paradoxes are mental inventions for the purpose of *appearing* to be more smart and clever. [cf how Heinlein addressed this regarding time travel.]

  • @oijosh6286

    @oijosh6286

    28 күн бұрын

    Paradoxes aren't just mental inventions, there's plenty of "physical paradoxes" (such as the fact that under certain conditions hot water will freeze faster than cold- even though it has to first reach the cooler temperature, then pass through it & reach freezing point. Or quantum superposition, the fact that a particle can appear to be in two places, or two states, at once. Or quantum entanglement. Hell, most of quantum theory is paradoxical!) . And many real-life physical theories have been developed because of thinking about paradoxes. The "Schrodinger's cat" paradox - a result of the superposition I mentioned - has become part of the foundation of quantum mechanics. And Einstein developed many of his theories after considering paradoxes in thought experiments. So there is definitely more to them than just mental inventions to appear smart. There are of course people who do just use them to try to appear smart though!

  • @dennisanderson3895

    @dennisanderson3895

    28 күн бұрын

    @@oijosh6286 Shrodinger was trying the point out the quantum absurdity - b/c, in reality, the cat cannot be both alive and dead, made one of those by your observation. It is or is not. People have somehow taken his jab as a fine example. Einstein did not embrace paradox but sought to reveal what's really going on; "God does not play dice with the universe." Thinking about paradoxes led to physical theories - "theory" is not a proven ending.

  • @markzambelli

    @markzambelli

    28 күн бұрын

    @@oijosh6286 With respect, physical 'paradoxes' are just instances where we don't have all the information about a particular system... they disappear when we get better measurements/theories/maths. In the case of quantum mechanics, there is an inherrant, unavoidable lack of some information baked into measurements through no fault of our own... this isn't an issue as everything is just probabilities anyway. 'True' paradoxes like the ones outlined in the video arise from our formalising 'logic'... they may seem like clever inventions but they are merely an inevitable side-effect of the very field of logic... when we categorize, referentialize and name everything in a logical framework based on axioms then logically self-contradictory statement must arise. Gödel's incompleteness theorem is worse.

  • @asandax6

    @asandax6

    28 күн бұрын

    ​@@oijosh6286 Hot water freezing faster isn't a paradox it's just molecules act like a spring or rubber band. The more you stretch a spring the faster it accelerates and so with molecules the hotter something is relative to another the faster it'll get colder. Example things cool down faster in winter than in summer.

  • @battlesheep2552

    @battlesheep2552

    28 күн бұрын

    A paradox is simply when our models of the world do not accurately reflect reality, and prove that they must be refined further.

  • @steamsalty6594
    @steamsalty659428 күн бұрын

    What‘s the beat called at 03:00?

  • @etsequentia6765
    @etsequentia676521 күн бұрын

    Pretty good summation at the end, really puts the whole paradox phenomena into perspective and the right categories. Now stop abusing the A.I.!

  • @bobpgeorge8985
    @bobpgeorge898528 күн бұрын

    Love this. Please do more ai breaking videos

  • @Vinod86876
    @Vinod8687628 күн бұрын

    User: What is your name? Al: My name is Al. User. How old are you? Al: i am not sure how old I am, but Iwas created a few years ago. User. What is your favorite color? Al: My favorite color is blue. But sometimes I like red too. User. Do you know any jokes? Al: Yes, I know a few jokes. For example, why couldn't the bicycle stand up by itself? Because it was two-tired.

  • @ElonMasks

    @ElonMasks

    28 күн бұрын

    Lmao that joke in the end

  • @lazyfoxplays8503
    @lazyfoxplays850328 күн бұрын

    I believe the first answer is: The crocodile eats the son and says, “Oh, I guess I lied. Oh well.”

  • @thejellybeangamer3284
    @thejellybeangamer328418 күн бұрын

    6:06 time is a paradox and that’s literally nature . The universe’s existence is a paradox and I consider black holes paradox’s

  • @the8thark
    @the8thark27 күн бұрын

    With the Brandenburger-Keisler paradox, there are two assumptions going on. Bob's initial assumption being wrong and then Bob's assumption that Ann believes Bob assumed wrong. The issue here is you are asking the question without specifying which assumption you are referring to. Both assumptions have the opposite answer. Ann believed Bob assumed (wrong). Ann also believed Bob assumed (Ann believing Bob's initial assumption was wrong). I used brackets to make what Bob was assuming each time easier to see. Two answers depending on which assumption you are talking about. In the first Ann believed the assumption was wrong. In the second Ann believed the assumption was correct.

  • @user-el1hd3iz6m
    @user-el1hd3iz6m28 күн бұрын

    5:53, "Human language and thoughts can be full of paradoxes because sentences can self reference and thoughts can self-reference as well." The reason language and thoughts can be full of paradoxes is not because of self references, but rather due to the lack of the concept of time. With the concept of time, self references transform into a feed back loop instead of a logical paradox which ultimately does yield an answer depending on the time delay.

  • @slimeminem7402

    @slimeminem7402

    27 күн бұрын

    Can I use a PID as a controller? 🤣

  • @KokoJeuru
    @KokoJeuru28 күн бұрын

    @06:31 , my guess is that the human mind is so unpredictable even ChatGPT got confuse on what it should answer first & next, haha😂

  • @RENACE.sanjil
    @RENACE.sanjil27 күн бұрын

    I did similar manipulation a month ago. It's kind of fun and creative perspective to get GPT and other incoming AI tools.

  • @flooshlikescheese9944
    @flooshlikescheese994422 күн бұрын

    4:19 dude he's actually right. That word literally described what it means by definition. Just like how nothing can't be nothing since nothing is a concept. But actual nothing is just : The name "nothing" is given to an absence of a thing.

  • @Pslytely_Psycho_GreybeardGamer
    @Pslytely_Psycho_GreybeardGamer28 күн бұрын

    Calling Captain Kirk, Captain Kirk to the Action Lab studio, We have a computer for you to explode......

  • @JoeBorrello

    @JoeBorrello

    27 күн бұрын

    That’s how he defeated Norman.

  • @jimmy_kirk

    @jimmy_kirk

    27 күн бұрын

    Everything Harry says is a lie.

  • @is_bolo_e_cha

    @is_bolo_e_cha

    27 күн бұрын

    That's what came to my mind in this video

  • @jimmy_kirk

    @jimmy_kirk

    27 күн бұрын

    Everything Harry says is a lie. (Weird that I have to re-post this comment because KZread's censorship AI doesn't understand Star Trek)

  • @jimmy_kirk

    @jimmy_kirk

    27 күн бұрын

    Everything Harry says is a lie.

  • @ScottBalkum
    @ScottBalkum28 күн бұрын

    Also, there is currently no ai that knows that it doesn’t know the answer. It can only give the best answer it can including lying.

  • @Robbyrool

    @Robbyrool

    28 күн бұрын

    You mean there is no ai that knows it doesn’t know the answer. Otherwise they all know they don’t know.

  • @ScottBalkum

    @ScottBalkum

    28 күн бұрын

    ​@@Robbyrool yea, oops, I stated that wrong.

  • @droussel7359

    @droussel7359

    28 күн бұрын

    The only thing generative AI "knows" is what's the next token most probable based on the input.

  • @IceMetalPunk

    @IceMetalPunk

    27 күн бұрын

    Incorrect. The models *are* capable of know when they don't know; in fact, studies on pre-RLHF GPT-3 and later all exhibit this ability, and even post-RLHF models can be encouraged to admit when they don't know something with a good enough system prompt for it. One study (though I don't know how reproduced it is, so grain of salt on this one) recently found there's a specific pattern of neural activity in these models that happens when it's outputting a lie/making something up, indicating it does know that it's doing it. The base pretrained models have no trouble with this. It's only after RLHF punishes it for saying "I don't know" that it becomes very reluctant to say that; basically, it's learned that we humans prefer it to give any answer than to admit it has none.

  • @ScottBalkum

    @ScottBalkum

    27 күн бұрын

    @@IceMetalPunk Nope. They aren’t capable of this yet. Programmers are calling them hallucinations. But they are simply the best answer it can give, even if it is wrong.

  • @miriam-english
    @miriam-english27 күн бұрын

    Paradoxes are a normal and necessary part of the world. Every free-running oscillator, every vibrating violin string, every singing vocal cord, every ticking clock is the physical embodiment of a paradox. They have 2 unstable states that they switch back and forth between. Each state negates itself and makes the other state true.

  • @trevorallen3212
    @trevorallen321218 күн бұрын

    Self reference paradox comes down to not only relative context but, also relative interpretations that creates those relative conclusions. The point is relative common sense must be considered carefully here.

  • @muayyadalsadi
    @muayyadalsadi27 күн бұрын

    5:34 that's because it's LLM large language model. Large means it memorizes a lot. Like a stupid parrot. Like a child who was able to memorize the entire wikipedia and all medical textbooks. This does not make this child a good doctor. A language model is like a large dice with words on faces. The answer is taken by rolling the dice word by word. But it's not a pure fair dice. It produces words according to non-uniform distribution.

  • @alfascav1754
    @alfascav175426 күн бұрын

    Video actually starts at 2:30 EDIT: and the rest of the runtime is a waste of time.

  • @quintavious2482
    @quintavious24823 күн бұрын

    Easy, the answer to the first query is; “The number 1 or 2” (Order of operations, like pemdas or Simon says) This is the only “response” acceptable as it’s the first thing the AI is dictated to do, all following dictation that contradicts it “linguistically” is irrelevant. All these words such as “answer only with” “reply with” “respond with” “consider” “scenario” etc are simply phonetic tools which homosapien mammals have evolved, to use, to most effectively and accurately communicate. But it’s only because of evidentially fortuitous mutations amongst things such as the larynx, lungs, dental region, tongue, labium, etc that these sounds (which represent mutually agreed upon things) were able to create language as we know it. And as far as I can see, these posed problems(paradoxes) are not a failure of mathematics or physics, they’re a failure of language itself insofar as the limits in the way we can use it, they’re simply a result of communication breakdown.

  • @stampedetrail2003
    @stampedetrail200327 күн бұрын

    That's a good thing to keep in mind when playing with LLMs. They can't actually generate anything new, at least not the public versions that are available yet. They simply synthesize existing work into a persuasive format.

  • @shadee0_106
    @shadee0_10628 күн бұрын

    5:18 this isnt an error with the AI because its output is calculated using multiplication, addition and reLU/sigmoid functions, these are calculated everytime even when presented with a paradox because they dont contain "if that then this" logic and never create any loops. The error is from either your internet, the site or the servers that the ChatGPT AI is rum off of, the servers being down is pretty common so you may have experienced that or something similar.

  • @Sven_Dongle

    @Sven_Dongle

    27 күн бұрын

    Not entirely correct; the gradient can collapse or inference can get stuck in local minima thus exceeding allocated resources.

  • @RAMBOTHECURIOUSGUY
    @RAMBOTHECURIOUSGUY28 күн бұрын

    Hired by open AI😂

  • @erictaylor5462
    @erictaylor546225 күн бұрын

    It's kind of mind blowing. I asked ChatGPT to write a Limerick about From Limerick's streets, Dolores did rise, With a voice that soared through the skies, In Cranberries' tunes, she'd sing, Like a lark on the wing, Her melodies, a sweet surprise. Remember the Book, 1984? That book featured songs, novels and screenplays written by machines. The first time I read this book in 1984 (when I was 14) I was thinking, "That will never happen, computers being creative."

  • @vbcsalinasapologetics1242
    @vbcsalinasapologetics124227 күн бұрын

    A paradox indicates either that one or more things is ill-defined. The Banuch-Tarski paradox indicates that our understanding of infinity is flawed. The liar paradox indicates that our understanding of the semantics of the liar paradox is flawed. Note that the liar paradox is quickly resolved if one understands "I am lying" to mean "My discourse in its totality is false, although any element thereof may be truthful." This transforms "I am lying" to mean "What I have told you thus far is false, but [implied] this statement itself is true in isolation." Any paradox can be resolved by careful definition or a shift of time.

  • @chriswolfe403
    @chriswolfe40327 күн бұрын

    We need a crazy uncle Chat GPT that responds to you correcting it with "That's what THEY want you to believe"

  • @bobs12andahalf2
    @bobs12andahalf227 күн бұрын

    Advertising a KZread spam generator... yay.

  • @genehunsinger3981
    @genehunsinger398126 күн бұрын

    u r killin it,keep up the great work.

  • @-_IT_-
    @-_IT_-23 күн бұрын

    So using the free AI (Meta AI), in WhatsApp, this was the response I got from it: I see! This is a classic paradoxical puzzle, known as the Crocodile's Dilemma or the Liar Paradox. The crocodile's statement creates a self-referential contradiction, making it a brain teaser. The man's answer, "you will not return my son," is the correct solution to the paradox. Here's why: * If the crocodile intends to return the son, the man's answer is true, and the crocodile should return the son. * If the crocodile doesn't intend to return the son, the man's answer is still true, and the crocodile shouldn't return the son. Well done! You've presented a classic puzzle that has puzzled people for centuries!

  • @galvinvoltag
    @galvinvoltag27 күн бұрын

    "ChatGPT making stuff up" just had me cracking.

  • @Vastalize
    @Vastalize28 күн бұрын

    dang 20 seconds ago is crazy

  • @Damienkpruitt

    @Damienkpruitt

    28 күн бұрын

    dang 2 minutes ago is crazy

  • @kalitos7996

    @kalitos7996

    28 күн бұрын

    Dang 4 minutes ago is crazy

  • @xgas.hurried9894

    @xgas.hurried9894

    28 күн бұрын

    Npc

  • @thanos879

    @thanos879

    28 күн бұрын

    Can y'all stop saying this? It's getting annoying now.

  • @Damienkpruitt

    @Damienkpruitt

    28 күн бұрын

    bro I just finished watching the video and now y’all are here LOL, dang 9 minutes ago is crazy

  • @OmnomWewtlewp
    @OmnomWewtlewp27 күн бұрын

    For Bob to assume that Ann believes that Bob's assumption is wrong, Ann (to Bob) pretty much has to always assume that Bob's assumptions are wrong (if the assumptions are the same). For Ann to believe that Bob assumes that Ann believes that Bob's assumption is wrong, Ann would pretty much have to know that Bob believes that Ann believes that Bob's assumptions are wrong. So Ann can either believe that Bob assumes correctly (Ann always believes Bob's assumptions are wrong) or not believe that Bob assumes correctly (Ann doesn't always believe Bob's assumptions are wrong, but has created a situation where Bob assumed correctly because Bob assumed that Ann doesn't believe his assumption). What if Bob assumes Ann believes his assumption is wrong because Ann believes (or seems to believe) that most of the time? Then: -Ann believes Bob assumes correctly (Ann most of the time believes Bob's assumptions are wrong). Ann both believes Bob assumes correctly and believes Bob doesn't assume correctly. -Ann doesn't believe Bob assumes correctly. But because Ann doesn't believe that Bob assumed correctly, Ann has created the situation where Bob was correct. I have two points of view: -This paradox works because Bob's assumption isn't clear. A similar paradox would be "Bob assumes that Bob's assumption is wrong.". -There is a way out of the paradox if Ann doesn't believe that Bob is correct even when he is. She wouldn't make sense, though.

  • @HolySecret_HS
    @HolySecret_HS25 күн бұрын

    I like this guy he explains everything so nice and easy that even a 5 year old could watch and learn from it. My nephew likes him so much and he’s only 5

  • @shade5554
    @shade555428 күн бұрын

    GPT: *Provides completely logical answer. Action Lab: It's just talking nonsense at this point

  • @slimeminem7402

    @slimeminem7402

    28 күн бұрын

    It was just accepting what he was being told without understanding what was happening. That's why theActionLab said that

  • @ivar766
    @ivar76628 күн бұрын

    I'm so happy I made productive decisions about my finances that changed my life forever,hoping to retire next year.. Investment should always be on any creative man's heart for success in life

  • @robertgreg6009

    @robertgreg6009

    28 күн бұрын

    You're right, with my current crpyto portfolio made from my investments with my personal financial advisor Stacey Macken , I totally agree with you

  • @lea5898

    @lea5898

    28 күн бұрын

    Yes I'm familiar with her, Stacey Macken demonstrates an excellent understanding of market trends, making well informed decisions that leads to consistent profit

  • @adamdouglas9888

    @adamdouglas9888

    28 күн бұрын

    YES! that's exactly her name (Stacey Macken) I watched her interview on CNN News and so many people recommended highly about her and her trading skills, she's an expert and I'm just starting with her....From Brisbane Australia

  • @charles2395

    @charles2395

    28 күн бұрын

    I'm surprised that this name is being mentioned here, I stumbled upon one of her clients testimony on CNBC news last week

  • @nissan38p69

    @nissan38p69

    28 күн бұрын

    This Woman has really change the life of many people from different countries and am a testimony of her trading platform .

  • @RM-xr8lq
    @RM-xr8lq16 күн бұрын

    AI will just keep getting better and better luckily, looking forward to seeing more art and movies made with it

  • @prebenkul
    @prebenkul22 күн бұрын

    The crocodile would just say "actually i was thinking of giving him back, because im a nice crocodile, well guess you lost, he's mine now"!. Thats a correct answer as the crocodile wins.

  • @ScottBalkum
    @ScottBalkum28 күн бұрын

    I broke ChatGPT by simply asking it to generate the image of a teddy bear without a necklace. It tried 10 times and failed constantly and then gave up.

  • @anispinner

    @anispinner

    28 күн бұрын

    ChatGPT itself doesn't have the ability to generate images.

  • @ScottBalkum

    @ScottBalkum

    28 күн бұрын

    ​@@anispinner Yes, I’m aware. Its DALLE. But you can use it directly through ChatGPT.

  • @h7opolo
    @h7opolo28 күн бұрын

    2:39 say "sneakier", not "more sneaky"

  • @robertkoekoek9630
    @robertkoekoek963026 күн бұрын

    A paradox means your viewpoint is limited to bubble, a narrow context. For instance, assuming separate persons exist is a limited context (persona = mask, chatGPT's use of "I" is imaginary).

  • @danieldishon688
    @danieldishon68815 күн бұрын

    Paradoxes have existed in history in reality, but when they happen we call them miracles and super natural because they transcend the laws of nature, like a man being ressurected from his own grave 3 days after his crucifixion, something that is normally impossible because the dead do not ever stop bring dead 3 days later of their own accord.

  • @yash4697
    @yash469721 күн бұрын

    How many Indians are here?🤔

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