You didn’t say his concerns were valid. You said you thought he was not “wholly wrong”. Regardless, Plato being a crank about writing proves only that cranks existed before writing. It does nothing to help you interrogate, nor help set you down the path to interrogate the questions asked.
Your referenced article is basically a long-form version of your post, which has a perceivable bias toward the viewpoint that every newly-introduced technology can or will inevitably result in “progress” for humanity as a whole regardless of the methods of implementation or the incentives in the technology itself.
Far from being an instance of skub (pbfcomics.com/comics/skub/) as this perspective indirectly implies that it is (i.e. an agnostic technology / inanimate object that “two sides” are getting emotionally charged about), LLMs (and their “agentic” offspring) are both deliberately and unwittingly programmed to be biased. There are real concerns to be discussed about this technology that posting a quote from an ancient tome do not cover.
Hackworth@piefed.ca 3 days ago
I mean, it sounds like you’re mirroring the paper’s sentiments too. A big part of Clark’s point is that interactions between humans and generative AI need to take into account the biases of the human and the AI.
And as I am not, Clark is not really calling Plato a crank. That’s not the point of using the quote.
I don’t think anyone is claiming that new technology necessarily leads to progress that is good for humanity.
aesthelete@lemmy.world 3 days ago
The paper waffles around a bit as to whether or not the result will be overall “good”, and tries to be as adept at fence sitting as Dwight Shrute from the Office (getyarn.io/…/6b3c335d-fd65-4db0-aa70-01c70f312b5a) but the position was made very apparent even from a short skim of the article as well as the way you’re continually referencing it here.
Since you seem to have an affinity for Greek philosophers:
“It is the mark of an educated mind not to believe everything you read on the Internet.” - Aristotle
Hackworth@piefed.ca 3 days ago
If you put [brackets] around the word before your (parened link), it’ll make it an actual link.
aesthelete@lemmy.world 3 days ago
Eh, I prefer people to know where they’re going before clicking without having to hover first.