> Except they know it's wrong as soon as they say it and keep trying and trying again to correct themselves.
But it doesn't realize that it can't write it, because it can't learn from this experience as it doesn't have introspection the way humans do. A human who can no longer move their finger wont say "here, I can move my finger: " over and over and never learn he can't move it now, after a few times he will figure out he no longer can do that.
I feel this sort of self reflection is necessary to be able to match human level intelligence.
> because it can't learn from this experience as it doesn't have introspection the way humans do.
A frozen version number doesn't; what happens between versions certainly includes learning from user feedback on the responses as well as from the chat transcripts themselves.
Until we know how human introspection works, I'd only say Transformers probably do all their things differently than we do.
> A human who can no longer move their finger wont say "here, I can move my finger: " over and over and never learn he can't move it now, after a few times he will figure out he no longer can do that.
Humans do that, you need to read some Oliver Sacks, such as hemispheric blindness or people who don’t accept that one of their arms is their arm and think it’s someone else’s arm, or phantom limbs where missing limbs still hurt.
But it doesn't realize that it can't write it, because it can't learn from this experience as it doesn't have introspection the way humans do. A human who can no longer move their finger wont say "here, I can move my finger: " over and over and never learn he can't move it now, after a few times he will figure out he no longer can do that.
I feel this sort of self reflection is necessary to be able to match human level intelligence.