Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Tor Guttorm's avatar

Plese use correct spelling: Cheat-GPT…

Expand full comment
Eric Dane Walker's avatar

There are likely several reasons why you found academic philosophers to be thusly derelict. Here are a few.

(1) Academic philosophers who are interested in philosophizing about current issues (such as LLMs) are pretty much all thinking about current issues in terms of race and gender. (Why they're doing so is another story.) Hence the focus on bias.

(2) Academic philosophers, along with others in the academy who teach writing-intensive courses, are scrambling to figure out how to deal with two stubborn facts: that LLMs exist and that if they exist, students will use them. As far as I can tell, resigned acceptance is the most common attitude. Hence the felt futility of ethico-cultural arguments against LLMs.

(3) Since at least the early '70s, there's been an entire industry in academic philosophy that has been churning out papers whose arguments have their dialectical basis in the arguments and counterarguments of Thomas Nagel, David Chalmers, John Searle, Frank Jackson, Daniel Dennett, and the like. The topic has been, very broadly, the metaphysics of mindedness vs. unmindedness. These industries have a way of just . . . petering out. Academic philosophers might just be tired of talking about it. Hence the lack of enthusiasm about the big questions you gesture toward.

Expand full comment
28 more comments...

No posts