June 13, 2023
AI: GOOD OR BAD?
By The Babbling Barrister
It seems that all I hear about these days is AI, ChatGBT, and the like. I thought AI was steak sauce, but my refrigerator, which knows such things, tells me I’m wrong.
Artificial intelligence. I don’t mean to be critical, since I don’t know enough about this to harbor a strong opinion (does anyone?), but it sounds a tad oxymoronic to me (like military intelligence). For those of you who are a little unclear on what constitutes AI, the Oxford Dictionary defines it as “the theory and development of computer systems able to perform tasks that normally require human intelligence, such as visual perception, speech recognition, decision-making, and translation between languages.” ChatGBT, BTW, according to OpenAI, is “a sibling model to InstructGPT, which is trained to follow an instruction in a prompt and provide a detailed response.” That word “sibling” gives me a little agita.
Enough definitions. What are we talking about here? If I’m not mistaken, we have created machines to do what people do or used to do. That’s nothing new. Going backwards in time, in 1551 a guy named Taqi al-Din Muhammed ibn Ma’ruf invented the steam jack (an ingenious spit-turning device for a wood-fired hearth). The cotton gin was invented in the 6th century. The oldest machine known to humankind, the hand axe, dates back more than 100,000 years and perhaps as many as 1.6 million years ago. Then there is the wheel, the car, the plane, the rocket, the can opener. What would we do with all those cans without a can opener?
What happened from hand axe to AI? The brilliant but limited hand axe morphed into “tasks that normally require human intelligence.” Visual perception. Hmm, ok. Speech recognition. That’s good. Perhaps now I can watch Macbeth and understand what they are saying. Language translation. Great, now they will understand me when I order dinner in Greece. Or LA. But decision making? I can’t decide whether that should concern me. I may need help with that decision.
Let’s take a look at some of the pros and cons. The pros include reduction in human error. Also, taking risks so humans don’t have to (i.e., defusing bombs, going to Mars, eating hand-picked mushrooms, buying medication in Mexico). Available 24-7. Probably good? No lunch breaks, no sick days, no spring breaks to Ft. Lauderdale or Ibiza. But doesn’t someone have to keep an eye on them 24/7? Who’s going to do that? Not I.
Of course, there are other benefits of AI. And there are cons. Expensive to build. That’s a basic ROI issue. Making humans lazy. Or is that lazier? AI is or is likely to be addictive. From binge watching, videogames, cigarettes, and opioids, we already know the perils of addiction. Will AI make things worse? How about unemployment? That goes hand in hand with laziness, which may be the true gateway to addiction. What will you do with your free time? Paint? Travel? Learn how to play the sitar? Build crop circles? And then what?
My pet peeve is AI as a decision maker. Intelligent decisions require more than just bare knowledge. It requires context, and emotion, based on experience and wisdom. The difference between intelligence and wisdom? Intelligence is knowing tomatoes are fruit. Wisdom is not putting them in your fruit salad.
Can machines think outside of the box they were built in? Can they assess the emotional impact on an otherwise logical decision? As Mr. Spock logically opined “logic is the beginning of wisdom, not the end of it.”
AI may be helpful in many areas as long as it does not get out of control. We do not want robots creating other robots (essentially reproducing) or taking over the planet. Hypothetically, with unlimited intelligence, but no emotional constraints, which might happen (since robots are more efficient than humans, and they “know” that). So, the people who develop AI must be careful they don’t create the monster that eventually killed its maker, Dr. Frankenstein. One more Spockism: “Computers make excellent and efficient servants, but I have no desire to serve under them.”
What are your thoughts on AI?
*Warning: This article was written by a human. No machines were killed in the process of this creation.