Mind at the Threshold
Today we discuss training corpora, FFNs, and other features of LLMs, using analogies freely.
Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Mind at the Threshold!
$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.
7 episodios
Episode 7: "The Attention Layer: How AI Is Reorganizing Daily Life"
Episode 7 explores how AI is shifting from flashy demos to dependable infrastructure, what the hosts call “industrialized attention.” The focus is on systems that reliably filter massive data streams into actionable decisions across real-world domains: autonomous transportation, manufacturing, healthcare, and biology. Rather than emphasizing breakthroughs, the episode highlights operational maturity, reliability, and trust as the real drivers of impact over the next few years. The conversation also examines how responsibility and human roles change as AI systems scale, and why security and cryptography matter when AI underpins critical systems. The core message: AI’s power lies in dependable execution, not spectacle.
Episode 6: “The Limits of the Possible: Musk, Robotics, and the Human Hand”
In this episode, we examine a recent forum appearance by Elon Musk and Jensen Huang to separate technological reality from techno-optimist rhetoric. What starts as a discussion of AI, automation, and “post-work futures” quickly becomes a deeper investigation into the true bottlenecks of robotics—human dexterity, tactile perception, actuator physics, and the psychophysical laws that make the human hand an engineering frontier robots remain decades or even centuries from matching. Drawing on research in robotics, neuroscience, and moral philosophy, we explore why grand predictions about general-purpose robot labor ignore the constraints of embodiment and the human costs of disruption. Along the way, we connect Weber–Fechner, Fitts’ Law, and Brueghel’s Icarus to a broader ethical question: what do innovators owe the people who will live with the consequences of their visions?
Episode 5: “When the Unconscious Wakes: Dreams, Language, and the Human Voice”
In this episode, we begin with a haunting reverie, an octopus entering a human skull, a symbol that opens into a deeper inquiry into consciousness, embodiment, and the architecture of mind. Through Jungian analysis and neuroscientific insight, we trace the boundary between the unconscious and the rational self, before turning to the written word itself: the distinction between human and machine language. Stylometric patterns, prosody, and lexical entropy become instruments of philosophical exploration, culminating in a reading of “Lost London.” What emerges is a question both poetic and technical: can artifice ever incarnate soul, or can miracles indeed be engineered?
Episode 4: “Fear in a Handful of Dust”
In this episode, we explore how AI “creativity” works through the concepts of temperature, top-k, and top-p, using a poetic experiment based on T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land to show how small changes in randomness create very different artistic results. We then expand into the origins of consciousness, focusing on octopus intelligence, human vulnerability, and what it means to feel and create. It’s a blend of science, poetry, and philosophy, a look at how both machines and humans search for meaning.
Episode 3: “The Organ of Thought: Inside the Machinery of Language Models”
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Mind at the Threshold!