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This seems to assume that there exists some magical pixie dust called "sentence" or "consciousness", without which a mere algorithm is somehow constrained from achieving great things. I don't see any justification for this idea. A p-zombie Einstein could still invent the theory of relativity. A p-zombie Shakespeare could still have written Hamlet.
I was thinking that too as I read that comment, but that objection seems to be covered by "(F): Such machines independently achieve C sans A and/or B" - C being FOOM, A being sentience, and B being ability to solve out-of-context problems (I'm personally not even sure what this B actually means).
For code in a box, all problems are outside-context problems.
Thanks for clarifying, though I admit I'm still confused. In that case, what you meant by bullet B is "Code in a box gains the ability to solve some problem at all," and I'm not sure what that actually means. People write code in boxes specifically in order to solve problems, so trivially code in a box can solve problems. So clearly that's not what you're referring to. What's the differentiator that allows us to distinguish between code in a box that has the ability to solve some problems at all and code in a box that lacks that ability, given that all code in boxes exist purely for their (purported - depending on the coder's skill) ability to solve some problem?
If GPT were free from tone/content filters it could output very detailed text on breaching air gaps. If GPT were free from tone/content filters it could output text describing how to protect a core datacenter from nuclear strikes. GPT solving outside-context problems would be actually breaching an air gap or actually protecting a core datacenter from a nuclear strike. The first is a little more plausible for a "less powerful" computer insofar as events like Stuxnet happened. The second without FOOM, not so much.
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