Wednesday, May 29, 2024

Artificial Intelligence responds to my Memorial Day blog post

"O brave new world that has such people in it!"
     
 William Shakespeare, The Tempest

There aren't people in the brave new world of Artificial Intelligence. But it knows stuff anyway.



My blog post on Memorial Day received far more than the usual amount of criticism. 

I outlined a theory of history: endless cycles, not progress. I said that since the human species sought status within and between groups, human groups would be drawn to war by our instinctual motivations of self-interest, honor-seeking, and fear of the ambitions of others. I said these motivations lead to wars of territorial conquest. I cited White settlers replacing indigenous people in North America. I said the cycles of ebb and flow continue, and ownership of my farm back to indigenous people will come full circle when descendants of immigrants from the south own the farmland again. I was serene about it.

One critic said the immigrants were murderous outsiders and I would regret welcoming them. Another said I was antisemitic in saying that humans, including both Jews and Arabs in Israel, wanted ethnic cleansing so disputed land would be an unshared homeland for their own tribe. Other critics thought I sounded bleak and depressed.

I asked an Artificial Intelligence program -- claude.ai -- what it thought. I asked it to write a response of approximately 250 words from the point of view of a Republican reader.  Here was  the AI response:

Dear Mr. Sage,

While I respect your right to express your views, I must strongly disagree with the bleak and cynical perspective presented in your recent blog post.

As Republicans, we believe in the fundamental goodness of America and the principles upon which our great nation was founded. Your characterization of history as an endless cycle of conquest and oppression, with no real progress, runs counter to the ideals that have made the United States a beacon of hope and opportunity for people around the world.

We acknowledge that our nation's history has its dark chapters, but we also celebrate the tremendous strides we have made in expanding liberty, equality, and justice for all. The Civil Rights Act and Voting Rights Act of the 1960s were not the birth of a "sham" nation, but rather important steps in our ongoing journey to form a more perfect union.

Your suggestion that the current political climate represents a "counter-revolution" against the gains made by women, minorities, and the LGBTQ community is misguided. As Republicans, we believe in equal opportunity for all Americans, regardless of their background. What we oppose are divisive identity politics that seek to pit one group against another.

Finally, your resignation to the idea that "humans come and go" and that our land will inevitably be lost to others is antithetical to the spirit of American exceptionalism. We believe in the power of our ideas and the resilience of our people to overcome any challenge and to secure a brighter future for generations to come.

America is not perfect, but it is a nation worth fighting for. As Republicans, we will continue to champion the values that have made us great and to work towards a future of opportunity and prosperity for all.

Sincerely, A Proud Republican


This reveals some of the abilities and limitations of AI at its current state of development. Artificial Intelligence text adopted a polite and reasonable tone. It got the Republican give-no-quarter response right. It held the ground of America-is-good patriotism.  AI saw "both sides." 

But the AI program mis-read my post describing a "sham." Equality, I had written, was an unmet aspiration of our founding documents until the 1964 and 1965 Civil Rights and Voting Rights laws, not because of them.

The AI text demonstrated a wider knowledge of events than what is present in the document it critiqued. It "knows" things, including the presence of "divisive identity politics" on the left. It "knows" that "American exceptionalism" is an idea a Republican critic might cite. AI is well-read and has good common sense.

There is a formula to it that my eighth grade English teacher, Ray Lewis, taught. Start with an opening statement of the point of view. Then three examples of evidence, the third one beginning with "finally." Then a short re-statement of the now-proven conclusion. It is a good formula for clear exposition. Its weakness is that it reads as formulaic.

I consider it soul-less, but I have a hard time describing why. If I were reading quickly for content I might consider it clear and persuasive. I probably would not notice it was written by a machine. It is competent and sounds confident.

I write these blog posts myself. I try to be competent and sound confident. Like claude.ai, I, too, make mistakes.



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13 comments:

Rick Millward said...

Uh...the robot made the case for a 18th century idealistic vision of America, but the values are not Republican, at least not the Republicans we are facing now.

"As Republicans, we believe in equal opportunity for all Americans, regardless of their background."

I'd be more confident of the value of AI if it was incapable of lying...

Mike said...

At this point, I would still consider Ken Burns a more knowledgeable and objective observer of American history than AI, which makes his recent break with neutrality regarding the election all the more significant: “We are at an existential crossroads in our political and civic lives. This is a choice that could not be clearer.”

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/ken-burns-donald-trump-2024-election-warning_n_6656f76de4b05212274a5e6f

Low Dudgeon said...

AI may be "well-read" as a general matter, but that arguably does not include the Federalist Papers. The Founders did not impute some special or "fundamental" goodness to Americans, any more or less than others humans. The goal was a system of governance best suited to protect persons and property from the myriad and intractable hazards of human nature, especially those reflected in government itself. American exceptionalism means best in the wry Churchillian sense. But then again AI was tasked to reply per its conception of a modern Republican. (At least it didn't cite Trump's rather alarmist tome, "Crippled America"). Especially in light of yesterday's blog entry, AI as if a Christian conservative might be another way to approach this exercise.

Tom said...

Peter
I thought your Tuesday blog post so right on that I read it to Linda out loud. The post was a very good 50,000 foot high overview of human history certainly as I perceive it without the politically correct weight of patriotism. Bravo! I find individual humans to be worthy of deep respect and admiration, but when they clump together not so much.

Ed Cooper said...

Claude seemed to have overlooked the not so recent drive by Republicans to dismantle and reverse entirely the Civil Rights and Voting Acts of the early 1960s.

John C said...

I rarely find AI to be persuasive- at least for now. It lacks a singular “voice”. However, like many humans, it seems to have mastered selective amnesia. It is useful for someone to add their personality, humor and emotion. And that’s what will make it convincing.

Michael Trigoboff said...

John Henry was a steel drivin' man

John Henry was a steel drivin' man
John Henry was a steel drivin' man
He died in West Virginia
With his hammer in his hand
They sing about him all across the land

John Henry was a steel drivin' man
He beat the steam drill down
And then he died
He beat the steam drill down
And then he died
And it didn't change nothin'
But heaven knows he tried
He was buried with his hammer by his side
He beat the steam drill down
And then he died
John Henry

There's coal beneath the mountain down below
There's coal beneath the mountain down below
And the company come to take it
But the work was hard and slow
Said well, there ain't no money in it
We'll just go
Alright, there's coal beneath the mountain down below

And the union come and tried to make a stand
The union come and tried to make a stand
And West Virginia miners voted union to a man
You'd never know it now, but that was then
When the union come and tried to make a stand

But the company brought in all the big machines
Well, the company brought in all the big machines
Cut more coal in an hour
Than a shift could in a week
John Henry could've told them what that means
When the company brought in all the big machines
Hey

John Henry was a steel drivin' man
John Henry was a steel drivin' man
He died in West Virginia
With his hammer in his hand
They sing about him all across the land
John Henry was a steel drivin' man

listen

Mike said...

“American Exceptionalism” is no joke. Compared to other G7 countries, the U.S. has the highest poverty rate, the highest rate of gun violence, the highest homicide rate, the highest per capita spending on healthcare and the worst healthcare outcomes. We're definitely exceptional.

Michael Trigoboff said...

America has the best computer tech, the best space launch tech, the best music, the most attraction for immigrants, the best economy, the best military.

And the most potential for new developments enabling a better future. America is where the smartest people come to build tomorrow.

Mike said...

According to U.S. News & World Report, the country with the most technological expertise, followed by South Korea and China.

Mike said...

Sorry, meant to say "...Japan, followed by..."

Michael Trigoboff said...

Funny how so many of the leading tech companies, like SpaceX and Nvidia, are American companies.

Mike said...

Funny how the biggest tech companies are American, but the best programmers and developers are elsewhere. In fact, the U.S. is ranked 28th.