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Mehticulous | 1 year ago

Sorry my thoughts seem to have offended you into a defensive position. That was not my intent. I'm sure that's why you attack someone's understanding. Saying there are gaps in logic, isn't accusatory or demeaning.

> None of it, I would guess.

You guess? Are you the author?

> AI is radical

Is it? Or is it a logical unfolding that has been predicted and theorized for the better part of a century? Perhaps aspects of its implementation are radical?

> It is literally free

So are disposable razor blades when you buy the handle. Who has the most to benefit from some companies' AI products being free? I bet it's not the end-user.

> Some people don't know what a metaphor

Is that passive aggression? If so, how thoughtful. Some people are autistic.

All I'm saying is: Show me how much AI has actually changed and for whom. Then we can start this conversation. I was in fact, challenging the use of the plow as a metaphor.

AI seems very much a top down kind of tool, where a plow is bottom up.

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mandmandam|1 year ago

> I'm sure that's why you attack someone's understanding.

I "attack" [politely question] your understanding because you really don't seem to know what a metaphor is or how it works, based on the fact that you're complaining about "gaps in logic" rather than engaging with the similarities.

> Saying there are gaps in logic, isn't accusatory or demeaning.

It's a metaphor. It's easy to find "gaps in logic"; that's not why we use them. No one said you were demeaning (at least, until you started using 'autistic' as an insult).

> You guess? Are you the author?

If I were the author I would know. Since I'm not, I can only guess. What a strange thing to ask.

> Is it? Or is it a logical unfolding that has been predicted and theorized for the better part of a century?

Yes, yes it is. That's precisely why people have been writing about it - because it's truly radical and revolutionary. And now it's coming into it's own, as prophesied.

> Who has the most to benefit from some companies' AI products being free?

That could actually a good question. Not the point though.

The point is, you called it a luxury good, which typically implies exclusivity and high cost - yet you admit it's available to everyone at no cost.

You may as well ask, who benefits from free beer promotions? Not the end user, who faces liver cirrhosis and the threat of being lured into buying salty snacks!

> Is that passive aggression? If so, how thoughtful.

No, it's a genuine and sincere question. A lot of people think they know what metaphors are, but actually don't. And your writing gives that impression.

Btw, calling perceived passive aggression "thoughtful" is what passive aggression actually looks like.

> Some people are autistic.

And some people throw around ableist language. Me, I think that using autism as some kind of insult is intellectually lazy, and strongly indicative of poor character.

> All I'm saying is: Show me how much AI has actually changed and for whom.

It's changed humanity, and our future, in ways we can not begin to imagine. We will likely grow at least as dependent on it as we have been for 6,000 years on plows, and much quicker. Even in the area of food production AI can be a revolution. Denying this potential seems absurd to me.

If you want more examples, try asking Claude or ChatGPT lol.

> AI seems very much a top down kind of tool, where a plow is bottom up.

Both tools are designed to dig through big lumps of data/dirt, to make tasks easier and more efficient.

Plows revolutionized agriculture by letting people cultivate more land, while AI helps us process more information and solve complex problems faster.

Both require resources and effort to use effectively. A plow needs animals, workers, and land, while AI needs computing power, data, and human expertise.

Neither works alone, but needs to be guided by a human.

And both can be great equalizers or great dividers - depending on access.