How does that argument go? The same is true of a person doing (say) the cognitive reflection task.
“A bat and a ball together cost $1.10; the bat costs $1 more than the ball; how much does the ball cost?”
Standard answer: “$0.10”. But also standardly, if you say “That’s not correct”, the person will quickly realize their mistake.
Well, that’s true. People do also do that. I was trying to point to the idea of LLMs being able to act like multiple different people when properly prompted to do so.
How does that argument go? The same is true of a person doing (say) the cognitive reflection task.
“A bat and a ball together cost $1.10; the bat costs $1 more than the ball; how much does the ball cost?”
Standard answer: “$0.10”. But also standardly, if you say “That’s not correct”, the person will quickly realize their mistake.
Well, that’s true. People do also do that. I was trying to point to the idea of LLMs being able to act like multiple different people when properly prompted to do so.