I like these examples, but can’t we still view ChatGPT as a simulator—just a simulator of “Spock in a world where ‘The giant that came to tea’ is a real movie” instead of “Spock in a world where ‘The giant that came to tea’ is not a real movie”? You’re already posing that Spock, a fictional character, exists, so it’s not clear to me that one of these worlds is the right one in any privileged sense.
On the other hand, maybe the world with only one fiction is more intuitive to researchers, so the simulators frame does mislead in practice even if it can be rescued. Personally, I think reframing is possible in essentially all cases, which evidences the approach of drawing on frames (next-token predictors, simulators, agents, oracles, genies) selectively as inspirational and explanatory tools, but unpacking them any time we get into substantive analysis.
I like these examples, but can’t we still view ChatGPT as a simulator—just a simulator of “Spock in a world where ‘The giant that came to tea’ is a real movie” instead of “Spock in a world where ‘The giant that came to tea’ is not a real movie”? You’re already posing that Spock, a fictional character, exists, so it’s not clear to me that one of these worlds is the right one in any privileged sense.
On the other hand, maybe the world with only one fiction is more intuitive to researchers, so the simulators frame does mislead in practice even if it can be rescued. Personally, I think reframing is possible in essentially all cases, which evidences the approach of drawing on frames (next-token predictors, simulators, agents, oracles, genies) selectively as inspirational and explanatory tools, but unpacking them any time we get into substantive analysis.