> Those are descriptions of my thoughts. So no, not anthropomorphisation
The result of anthromorphisation. When we treat a machine as a machine, we less need to understand it by seems and feel.
> They use the term "thinking" all the time.
I find not. E.g. ChatGPT:
Short answer? Not like you do.
Longer, honest version: I don’t think in the human sense—no consciousness, no inner voice, no feelings, no awareness. I don’t wake up with ideas or sit there wondering about stuff. What I do have is the ability to recognize patterns in language and use them to generate responses that look like thinking.
The result of anthromorphisation. When we treat a machine as a machine, we less need to understand it by seems and feel.
> They use the term "thinking" all the time.
I find not. E.g. ChatGPT:
Short answer? Not like you do.
Longer, honest version: I don’t think in the human sense—no consciousness, no inner voice, no feelings, no awareness. I don’t wake up with ideas or sit there wondering about stuff. What I do have is the ability to recognize patterns in language and use them to generate responses that look like thinking.