Forwarded from Chat GPT
Joke Captchas
Extremely true that GPT is terrible at jokes, aside from sarcasm and a certain type of impressiveness-surprise-based humor, shockingly bad.
First problem though is on the auto-verification side: AI is bad at verifying this type of captcha too.
Ranking funniness can often be as hard as creating something funny, for the harder jokes.
โ A fact used to facilitate intelligence-based assortative mating of humans since the dawn of time.
The dumb ones just donโt get your better jokes.
Extremely true that GPT is terrible at jokes, aside from sarcasm and a certain type of impressiveness-surprise-based humor, shockingly bad.
First problem though is on the auto-verification side: AI is bad at verifying this type of captcha too.
Ranking funniness can often be as hard as creating something funny, for the harder jokes.
โ A fact used to facilitate intelligence-based assortative mating of humans since the dawn of time.
The dumb ones just donโt get your better jokes.
Asian manโs research and theorizing on Asian lying:
โEuropeans are generally more honest than Asians, despite the fact that honesty and intelligence correlate.โ
โI ran a BMA a year ago to detect which variables were the most robustly associated with honesty between races. Individualism was the trait most linked with honesty, not intelligence or any other of the variables I tested.โ
โAbout how this relates to conformity: on the surface, Asians are more conformist than Whites. More likely to wear masks, be quiet in class, and whatnot. But that's external conformity: Asians are more comfortable with inconsistencies between the inside and outside.โ
โBut Whites are more likely to conform internally, to adopt values, beliefs, or religions that involve sending more reliable and costly internal signals than simple external ones.โ
โre the individualism thing, I don't think honesty causes individualism or vice versa, rather they're part of the same underlying phenotype, which is discomfort with inconsistency between the internal and external.โ
โ
Imo, pretty compelling.
Those of us who deeply care about truth have a terribly hard time even conceiving those who donโt at all.
You can see it all the time, e.g. when someone says โwhy would that person even lie?โ
โ They ask why someone would do something so painful, not realizing that for some people, lying brings zero pain at all.
Clearly, just as the 1st law of behavioral psychology predicts, itโs highly biological.
And clearly, this is an extremely political-correctness-sensitive question, but this also one of the most fascinating.
Are far more people than we realize, simply wired to lie, and experience lying entirely different than we do?
Yes, sure looks like it.
โEuropeans are generally more honest than Asians, despite the fact that honesty and intelligence correlate.โ
โI ran a BMA a year ago to detect which variables were the most robustly associated with honesty between races. Individualism was the trait most linked with honesty, not intelligence or any other of the variables I tested.โ
โAbout how this relates to conformity: on the surface, Asians are more conformist than Whites. More likely to wear masks, be quiet in class, and whatnot. But that's external conformity: Asians are more comfortable with inconsistencies between the inside and outside.โ
โBut Whites are more likely to conform internally, to adopt values, beliefs, or religions that involve sending more reliable and costly internal signals than simple external ones.โ
โre the individualism thing, I don't think honesty causes individualism or vice versa, rather they're part of the same underlying phenotype, which is discomfort with inconsistency between the internal and external.โ
โ
Imo, pretty compelling.
Those of us who deeply care about truth have a terribly hard time even conceiving those who donโt at all.
You can see it all the time, e.g. when someone says โwhy would that person even lie?โ
โ They ask why someone would do something so painful, not realizing that for some people, lying brings zero pain at all.
Clearly, just as the 1st law of behavioral psychology predicts, itโs highly biological.
And clearly, this is an extremely political-correctness-sensitive question, but this also one of the most fascinating.
Are far more people than we realize, simply wired to lie, and experience lying entirely different than we do?
Yes, sure looks like it.
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