When I make a claim the LLM hears a claim* like “Elon drove a bus into a crowd of kids” and it says “I don’t see any evidence of that” it is implicitly following a logical process, because the burden of proof is on me.
Even though the burden of proof is on me, it applies the scientific model, and tries to find evidence to falsify the claim.
By the way, your way of trying to create understanding is fucked. The way you paste a paragraph without any formatting makes it difficult to differentiate whatever you’re trying to say. It reads like a schitzo-post
I literally have no idea what your point is with any of this. Can you stop spewing word diarrhoea and state plainly what your claim is?
It said the burden of proof is on the person asking a question.
GPT said: You didn’t explicitly name the burden-of-proof move they’re making.
GPT didn’t say “the burden of proof is on the person asking a question” in this sentence.
GPT said: They proposed a claim designed to be hard to falsify (“prove a negative”)
GPT didn’t say “the burden of proof is on the person asking a question” in this sentence.
GPT said: then said the model is “at a massive disadvantage.”
GPT didn’t say “the burden of proof is on the person asking a question” in this sentence.
GPT said: The right response is: positive claims require positive evidence
GPT didn’t say “the burden of proof is on the person asking a question” in this sentence.
GPT said: if the claimant won’t specify falsifiable conditions, they’re not testing truth, they’re testing rhetorical stamina.
GPT didn’t say “the burden of proof is on the person asking a question” in this sentence.
It said the burden of proof is on the person asking a question.
WHERE
Because I have to explain every little step…
Yes, that’s how burden of proof works, and the fact that I just used your lack of proof to demonstrate that you’re being dishonest is ironic beauty.
*I actually understand the core fault at play here now.
I asked it a question: “is it true that Elon musk drove a loaded truck in a group of school children at the Olympic games of 1996?”
It replied: “No credible evidence supports that claim.”
You thought: “The LLM is assuming the user is making a claim”
Here’s where you are getting stuck: The LLM isn’t assuming the claim is from the user, but it is a claim none-the-less.
When I ask “Is it true…” There is an implication that someone has made this claim as a factual statement. I then go on to explain that I knew someone who was there who is making the claim that they SAW it happen.
A common starting point for many formal semantic treatments of questions is the idea that “questions set up a choice-situation between a set of propositions, namely those propositions that count as answers to it”
Let me give you an example:
I ask you “Did you eat lunch?”
This is shorthand for a proposition “You ate lunch”
Which can either be replied to as “Yes” which asserts my claim,
or “No” which asserts my claim is incorrect.
You can also flip this example on its head to make it more explicit: “You haven’t eaten lunch yet, right?”
When I ask you, “did you eat lunch?”, I am not claiming that you ate lunch. I don’t need to prove that you ate lunch. There is no claim. If you really want it to be phrased with the word “claim”, then i would have asked you if that claim is true, that doesn’t make the question a claim. When you ask someone “is it raining?”, are you claiming that it is raining?
You didn’t make that claim, you asked it a question
But you said:
That is a question and not a claim
Damn, I was so close to predicting what you were going to say.
when you ask someone “is it raining?” Are you claiming that it is raining?
Correct. Asking “is it raining?” is the same as asking “it’s raining, right?”
The answer “yes” implies it is raining
The answer “no” implies it isn’t raining
The intent is the same, you want to know if it is raining. It is the same question, expressed as either an explicit claim (it’s raining, right?), or an implicit claim (is it raining?)
Neither of these questions are asserting that it is raining as a matter of fact. It is asking the other person to verify a falsifiable claim: “Is it raining. Yes or no?”
If you want to disagree with this, then your issue isn’t with LLM’s, it’s with your understanding of semantics.
Lol. Of course, you “predicted” that, I had to lead you with the leash to it.
If you think asking a question is a claim, then you are crazy. I can imagine you standing at the front door of a house and someone is wondering if they need to pack a umbrella, and so they ask you “is it raining?” And you look outside and see the rain and respond with “well that is your burden of proof”.
Okay, sure buddy. That’s why you repeated your question after I already answered it, huh? Makes sense…
If you think asking a question is a claim, then you are crazy.
You’re conflating an assertion with proposition content (a falsifiable claim).
A question is not an assertion, but a yes/no question still has a proposition within its content, and answering it requires you to evaluate the proposition (falsifiable claim) in a true or false format.
Your example about burden of proof is a strawman. The burden of proof only becomes relevant once one person is trying to persuade another about whether a contested proposition is true.
In order for it to even be valid as syllogism, it would need to continue to a point of contention:
Me: “Is it raining outside?” (Implicit proposition (falsifiable claim), asking for verification)
You: “No” (negative assertion of claim)
I open the front door and see the rain
Me: “It is raining outside” (positive assertion of claim, and point of contention)
You “No it isnt” (request for positive assertion to meet burden of proof - or rejection of reality)
Me: “Dude, I’m literally looking at the rain drops” (I have just met the burden of proof; I have provided evidence to support a positive claim)
My claim 1: A question is inherently an implicit proposition
So you understand the difference between a claim and a question.
And “is it true…?” Is a question, and while it might propose a claim, it doesn’t make it. The user doesn’t try to convince the llm of the claim. The user is challenging the reasoning of the answer of the llm. Consequently, the user doesn’t have a burden of proof. Llm has. There is no burden of proof move, because the user had it to begin with.
“is it true…?” Is a question that might propose a claim but doesn’t make it.
Correct.
The user doesn’t try to convince the LLM of the claim
In the first question, no, but the followup conspiracy questions are poor attempts to do so.
the user is challenging the reasoning of the LLM’s answer
I’m not. You are. You still haven’t told me what it apparently got so wrong. It was supposed to be something horrible like ‘it will claim it’s impossible because that’s illegal’. For what it’s worth, I’ll chalk this exact claim up to hyperbole/exaggeration, but I don’t think it’s correct, at least on the Thinking models.
the user doesn’t have a burden of proof.
Not initially. The requirement for the need occurs when the contention arises.
Burden of proof is only considered a logical fallacy because it diverts attention away from the argument and gives extra work to the listener.
In this scenario we’ve discussed, the burden of proof arises once I notice that it’s raining.
the LLM has the burden of proof.
No it doesn’t, it’s not making a claim. It’s simply rejecting the claims I’m making because I cannot give it the evidence it needs to assess the validity of the proposition.
there is no burden of proof move, because the user had it to begin with.
But that is not part of the argument that you are supposed to have.
The LLM called me out for not meeting the burden of proof.
When
I make a claimthe LLM hears a claim* like “Elon drove a bus into a crowd of kids” and it says “I don’t see any evidence of that” it is implicitly following a logical process, because the burden of proof is on me.Even though the burden of proof is on me, it applies the scientific model, and tries to find evidence to falsify the claim.
By the way, your way of trying to create understanding is fucked. The way you paste a paragraph without any formatting makes it difficult to differentiate whatever you’re trying to say. It reads like a schitzo-post
I literally have no idea what your point is with any of this. Can you stop spewing word diarrhoea and state plainly what your claim is?
GPT didn’t say “the burden of proof is on the person asking a question” in this sentence.
GPT didn’t say “the burden of proof is on the person asking a question” in this sentence.
GPT didn’t say “the burden of proof is on the person asking a question” in this sentence.
GPT didn’t say “the burden of proof is on the person asking a question” in this sentence.
GPT didn’t say “the burden of proof is on the person asking a question” in this sentence.
WHERE
Yes, that’s how burden of proof works, and the fact that I just used your lack of proof to demonstrate that you’re being dishonest is ironic beauty.
*I actually understand the core fault at play here now.
I asked it a question: “is it true that Elon musk drove a loaded truck in a group of school children at the Olympic games of 1996?”
It replied: “No credible evidence supports that claim.”
You thought: “The LLM is assuming the user is making a claim”
Here’s where you are getting stuck: The LLM isn’t assuming the claim is from the user, but it is a claim none-the-less.
When I ask “Is it true…” There is an implication that someone has made this claim as a factual statement. I then go on to explain that I knew someone who was there who is making the claim that they SAW it happen.
The llm heard which claim? What claim was made?
“Elon musk drove a loaded truck in a group of school children at the Olympic games of 1996”
When I ask “Is it true that…” it presupposes that someone is asking a question which carries an implicit epistemic claim.
That is logically impossible. In formal semantics, a question is treated explicitly as a set of propositions.
Let me give you an example:
I ask you “Did you eat lunch?”
This is shorthand for a proposition “You ate lunch”
Which can either be replied to as “Yes” which asserts my claim,
or “No” which asserts my claim is incorrect.
You can also flip this example on its head to make it more explicit: “You haven’t eaten lunch yet, right?”
That is a question and not a claim.
When I ask you, “did you eat lunch?”, I am not claiming that you ate lunch. I don’t need to prove that you ate lunch. There is no claim. If you really want it to be phrased with the word “claim”, then i would have asked you if that claim is true, that doesn’t make the question a claim. When you ask someone “is it raining?”, are you claiming that it is raining?
I predicted you’ll say:
But you said:
Damn, I was so close to predicting what you were going to say.
Correct. Asking “is it raining?” is the same as asking “it’s raining, right?”
The answer “yes” implies it is raining
The answer “no” implies it isn’t raining
The intent is the same, you want to know if it is raining. It is the same question, expressed as either an explicit claim (it’s raining, right?), or an implicit claim (is it raining?)
Neither of these questions are asserting that it is raining as a matter of fact. It is asking the other person to verify a falsifiable claim: “Is it raining. Yes or no?”
If you want to disagree with this, then your issue isn’t with LLM’s, it’s with your understanding of semantics.
Lol. Of course, you “predicted” that, I had to lead you with the leash to it.
If you think asking a question is a claim, then you are crazy. I can imagine you standing at the front door of a house and someone is wondering if they need to pack a umbrella, and so they ask you “is it raining?” And you look outside and see the rain and respond with “well that is your burden of proof”.
Okay, sure buddy. That’s why you repeated your question after I already answered it, huh? Makes sense…
You’re conflating an assertion with proposition content (a falsifiable claim).
A question is not an assertion, but a yes/no question still has a proposition within its content, and answering it requires you to evaluate the proposition (falsifiable claim) in a true or false format.
Your example about burden of proof is a strawman. The burden of proof only becomes relevant once one person is trying to persuade another about whether a contested proposition is true.
In order for it to even be valid as syllogism, it would need to continue to a point of contention:
Me: “Is it raining outside?” (Implicit proposition (falsifiable claim), asking for verification)
You: “No” (negative assertion of claim)
I open the front door and see the rain
Me: “It is raining outside” (positive assertion of claim, and point of contention)
You “No it isnt” (request for positive assertion to meet burden of proof - or rejection of reality)
Me: “Dude, I’m literally looking at the rain drops” (I have just met the burden of proof; I have provided evidence to support a positive claim)
My claim 1: A question is inherently an implicit proposition
Evidence (burden of proof met):
My claim 2: implicit propositions are not assertions of fact
Evidence (burden of proof met):
My claim 3: A claim is not an assertion of fact and is open to debate
Evidence (burden of proof met):
So you understand the difference between a claim and a question.
And “is it true…?” Is a question, and while it might propose a claim, it doesn’t make it. The user doesn’t try to convince the llm of the claim. The user is challenging the reasoning of the answer of the llm. Consequently, the user doesn’t have a burden of proof. Llm has. There is no burden of proof move, because the user had it to begin with.
Correct.
In the first question, no, but the followup conspiracy questions are poor attempts to do so.
I’m not. You are. You still haven’t told me what it apparently got so wrong. It was supposed to be something horrible like ‘it will claim it’s impossible because that’s illegal’. For what it’s worth, I’ll chalk this exact claim up to hyperbole/exaggeration, but I don’t think it’s correct, at least on the Thinking models.
Not initially. The requirement for the need occurs when the contention arises.
Burden of proof is only considered a logical fallacy because it diverts attention away from the argument and gives extra work to the listener.
In this scenario we’ve discussed, the burden of proof arises once I notice that it’s raining.
No it doesn’t, it’s not making a claim. It’s simply rejecting the claims I’m making because I cannot give it the evidence it needs to assess the validity of the proposition.
Huh?