The Transformative Potential of ChatGPT in Learning and Efficiency

Via Mercola

Story at-a-glance

  • The fear of new technologies, be it calculators or ChatGPT, often stems from a lack of understanding and apprehension in the face of change. In the case of ChatGPT, we are witnessing a phase where initial fears are predominantly based on misconceptions about AI taking over human tasks entirely
  • While a 2013 study by the University of Oxford predicted that 47% of the American workforce might be replaced by AI over the next two decades, that prediction is unlikely to come to pass. Because AI hallucinations are a permanent feature, the need for human judgment will remain whenever and wherever AI is used
  • ChatGPT is designed to be a tool that augments human capabilities. It can facilitate various tasks, like generating ideas, composing texts, coding and more
  • ChatGPT is akin to a pipeline, channeling vast amounts of information and insights to disseminate knowledge more broadly. This efficiency is not about replacing human action but enhancing it, allowing individuals to focus on aspects of their work that require uniquely human attributes like empathy, strategic thinking and creativity
  • Six key precautions when using ChatGPT and other generative AIs are discussed

In an era where technological advancements are revolutionizing every aspect of our lives, ChatGPT emerges as a beacon of innovation, especially in the realms of learning and efficiency.

I was really surprised that 61% of you disagreed with me on the value of ChatGPT, even though I believe the article I wrote was well balanced and had an accurate description of the concerns and strategies to mitigate these concerns. But most of you did not see it that way.

Many may not remember that technology has been a lifelong passion of mine and I am an early adopter. I took my first computer programming class in 1968 and was first on the internet in 1978, long before the web began. I started my website in 1997, before Google even existed. I recognized that the internet was the greatest innovation in history at that time, which is why I started my website so early.

I grabbed a ChatGPT account on the first day it was available in November 2023, because I recognized that it eclipsed the internet in terms of its revolutionary impact. Many of you may need a few years to catch up, but eventually you will recognize this.

However, its introduction is not without controversy, much like any groundbreaking technology that has preceded it. This controversy stems from a fundamental misunderstanding of the role of such tools in augmenting human potential, rather than replacing it. This realization really hit home when I wrote my article on this topic last month.

At the heart of this misunderstanding is a fear reminiscent of the anxieties stirred a century ago with the advent of automobiles, replacing horse-drawn carriages. The automobile revolution brought about significant cultural and economic shifts, some of which were feared and resisted.

Overcoming Fear in Enhancing Human Capabilities

The fear of new technologies, be it calculators or ChatGPT, often stems from a lack of understanding and apprehension in the face of change.

When calculators were first introduced, there was concern about their impact on traditional calculation methods and the potential dependency on this new tool. Similarly, the initial apprehension toward ChatGPT and similar AI technologies revolves around the fear of over-reliance and the potential loss of certain skills or jobs.

With calculators, people eventually realized that these devices were not here to replace human intelligence but to enhance and assist in solving complex problems more efficiently. Calculators became indispensable tools, widely accepted, and integrated into education and professional settings. The fear subsided as the benefits became clear and the tool was understood as a complement to human capabilities, not a replacement.

To illustrate this further, consider the modern spreadsheet, a significant technological leap following the calculator. This tool efficiently processes the data you input, transforming it into a format that’s much clearer and simpler to understand.

Essentially, the spreadsheet software acts as an extension of your brain power, simplifying data interpretation and enhancing your understanding of what the data signifies. It’s widely acknowledged that spreadsheets are a helpful tool, and there’s generally no fear associated with using them.

In the case of ChatGPT, we are witnessing a similar phase where initial fears are predominantly based on misconceptions about AI taking over human tasks entirely. However, just like calculators, ChatGPT is designed to be a tool that augments human capabilities. It assists in various tasks, like generating ideas, composing texts, coding and more, thus enhancing our productivity, creativity and joy.

The comparison highlights a recurring pattern in the adoption of new technologies. Initial fears and resistance give way to acceptance and integration as the real value and role of technology as an aid rather than a replacement becomes evident.

Over time, just as the fear of calculators subsided and they became an integral part of our toolkit, the apprehensions surrounding ChatGPT and similar AI technologies are likely to diminish as their role as valuable tools in extending human capability is more widely recognized and understood.

Enhancing Human Potential, Not Replacing It

Another fear surrounding ChatGPT revolves around the concern of human redundancy — the fear that machines capable of mimicking human thought processes might render human cognition and action unnecessary. This fear, while understandable, overlooks the essence of what tools like ChatGPT are designed to achieve.

They are not replacements for human intellect or creativity, but facilitators that amplify these intrinsic human qualities. ChatGPT is akin to a pipeline, channeling vast amounts of information and insights, not to concentrate power or resources, but to disseminate knowledge more broadly.

This efficiency is not about replacing human action but enhancing it, allowing individuals to focus on aspects of their work that require uniquely human attributes like empathy, strategic thinking and creativity.

This dissemination of knowledge is particularly crucial in the field of education and learning. ChatGPT, with its ability to understand and generate human level insights, can be an invaluable tool for students and educators alike. I know that I have benefited greatly from its use as a tool to help me understand important concepts. It is exponentially superior to any search engine I have ever used.

It can provide instant access to information, aid in the composition of essays and reports, assist in language learning, and offer explanations of complex concepts, especially in health, biology and medicine. This capability enhances your learning experience, making it more interactive, personalized and accessible.

Maximize Your Efficiency and Achieve Your Goals

ChatGPT can radically improve your life if you use it carefully. My last article provided all the necessary cautions, some of which are summarized below, that you need to consider when using this tool. That said, let me give you some examples of what you can use ChatGPT for:

  • What do you want to do at this moment?
  • What do you want to learn?
  • What do you want to focus on?
  • What action do you want to take?
  • What do you want to change?

All those things are choices in the moment, and that is what ChatGPT facilitates. It provides you with radically more efficient information gathering in the moment, and a drastic reduction in wasted time and effort in finding information that would allow you to achieve your goals.

There are many of you who are unable to understand the smooth transition of your thought to action, or intent to action, through this technology. Rather, you think that you are no longer required, because you are not well-connected to your consciousness and your own sense of self.

You don’t yet realize that this is only a tool to facilitate and improve who you are. You see yourself as limited to your biology, and that is just not accurate. By doing so, you are limiting your understanding of your reality.

Consider ChatGPT as a Complement to Your Consciousness and Creativity

The effectiveness of ChatGPT in learning and efficiency hinges on your perspective. If you view it merely as an extension of your own mind, its potential is significantly limited. In fact, this view of technology radically increases your fear of it. This is because many people don’t understand that their mind and five senses have relatively limited data, compared to the ocean of data in their consciousness.

Your mind can be compared to a thimble that has a limited capacity to store information compared to the vast ocean of knowledge that is available outside our five senses in the realm of consciousness.

ChatGPT can be used as a tool that complements and extends your own “ocean” of knowledge and creativity if its true value is understood and realized. It can then become an ally in the learning process, and an aid that fosters deeper understanding, stimulates curiosity, and encourages independent thought.

By embracing this technology and integrating it into your workflows and learning processes, you can expand your horizons, enhance your capabilities, and journey toward a future where technology and human potential synergize to create a more informed, efficient and creative world.

You just need to be careful, as I outline in the precautions below. I understand the biases that are currently programmed into this technology, but this can change. In fact, there is a great likelihood that I will be meeting with Sam Altman, the founder and current CEO of open AI, later this year to discuss and facilitate an option to remove this bias.

In addition to the six key precautions below I strongly encourage you to consider before using ChatGPT, the most crucial is to never forsake your critical thinking skills while using it. This is arguably its greatest limitation.

ChatGPT is not a replacement for your own critical thinking; rather, it serves as an aid to enhance your creativity. It’s vital to keep this in mind and remember that ChatGPT is an adjunct, not a substitute, for your intellectual and creative capacities.

Six Key Precautions

Some of the key precautions to keep in mind when using ChatGPT (or similar large language models) include the following:

1. Protect your privacy; never share personal or confidential information about yourself or others — ChatGPT stores every conversation you have with it on OpenAI’s servers, and these logs are shared with other AI companies and AI trainers. As a result, any private information entered into chat can end up in responses to other people’s questions.

2. Be aware that ChatGPT gathers things like your IP address, browser type and browser settings, your interactions with the site and your online browsing history, and that OpenAI may share all of this information with unspecified third parties1 You consent to all that data gathering and sharing when you accept OpenAI’s privacy policy.2

3. Log in using a throwaway email address — ChatGPT also stores the email address you use when logging in, and in a recent experiment, Ph.D. candidate Rui Zhu was able to extract the email addresses of New York Times personnel and other users.3

The experiment has revealed a security loophole that could be exploited by malicious actors for phishing purposes and the like, so, to be on the safe side, you may want to use a throwaway email address when logging in rather than your personal or work-related email.

4. Find out your employer’s use policy — Due to the privacy risks, some companies and government agencies are prohibiting the use of ChatGPT on its networks, so make sure you know your employer’s policy.

For example, in October 2023, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) banned the use of third-party generative AI tools by employees and contractors in their official capacities and on government equipment due to data safety risks.4

In another example, staff at NASA are only permitted to use ChatGPT on personal accounts and must follow “acceptable use policies.” A helpful list of tips to prevent security risks from generative AI within an organization can be found on IANS Research blog.5

5. Be mindful that ChatGPT may hallucinate (fabricate information) and can offer persuasive yet factually incorrect arguments To minimize this risk, ask it to provide source links and verify the accuracy of the information given. Also, do not rely on ChatGPT-generated information in cases where doing so might have catastrophic consequences.

6. Keep in mind that there are many open legal questions when it comes to who owns the rights to ChatGPT-created images, content and code6 As noted in an IBM blog post,7 “Terms of service state that the output belongs to the provider of the input, but issues may arise when the output includes legally protected data sourced from other inputs. Copyright concerns8 may also arise if ChatGPT is used to generate written material based on copyrighted property.”

This is yet another reason why you’d want to use your own discernment and double-check everything. As just one example, if you’re using ChatGPT to produce written material, you need to make sure nothing has been plagiarized (taken word for word from a source without proper attribution).

Time will tell how that all pans out. In the meantime, use ChatGPT-generated output with caution, lest you get caught up in some copyright or license infringement dragnet later on. Getty Images has already raised a legal challenge9 against Stability, as its Stable Diffusion image generation tool was trained on Getty images and are now being used to create new images without paying licensing fees.

Replacement Theory May Be Off-Base

As reported by Business Insider10 in February 2023, while a study11 by the University of Oxford, published in 2013, predicted that 47% of the American workforce might be replaced by AI over the next two decades, that prediction “appears to have been off-base … because human judgement still needs to be applied to these technologies to avoid error and bias.”

Anu Madgavkar, a partner at the McKinsey Global Institute, told Business Insider,12 “We have to think about these things as productivity enhancing tools, as opposed to complete replacements,” which is precisely the stance I’m advocating for.

As noted by IANS Research,13 AI hallucinations “are not going away. They are a feature, not a bug.” So, human discernment and expertise will remain a crucial component whenever and wherever AI technology is used.

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20 Comments
Anonymous
Anonymous
February 22, 2024 7:12 am

I remain a Luddite.

VOWG
VOWG
February 22, 2024 7:59 am

A I is not sentient and never will be.

flash
flash
February 22, 2024 8:23 am

Don’t fear the fake and gay AI…reeeee

Kennyboy
Kennyboy
February 22, 2024 10:23 am

CHATGTP??? IS ONLY AS GOOD AS IT’S CREATORS…WITCH IS LIKE ACCEPTING “THE BORG” AS IF IT SPEAKS “TRUTH”….REMEMBER WHAT HAPPENED TO THE BORG IN “STAR-TREK”???

General
General
February 22, 2024 10:36 am

AI will eventually be sentient, only the timing is uncertain. It may be a year, ten years, or a century.

The human brain, which is basically an organic computer, is estimated to have around 80 billion neurons and 200 trillion synaptic connections.

Since computer memory and processing speed are continuously improving, it’s only a matter of time before it surpasses a human brain.

Anthony Aaron
Anthony Aaron
  General
February 22, 2024 12:06 pm

While your assertion may be true, there’s one enormous difference between the human brain and computers — and that’s in the programming. The human brain was programmed by its Creator to full the Creator’s purposes here … the computer is programmed by humans of different intentions and agendas … hence all of the problems in earlier AI facial recognition software that often attributed crime to blacks and browns … and even the current AI is at the mercy and direction of its human programmers, as evidenced by the images that is supposedly AI produced depicting the Founders of the United States and numerous other events throughout history.

Anonymous
Anonymous
February 22, 2024 11:14 am

I’ve seen people talking about not being left behind by the technology, only Luddites won’t be using it.

Inevitably they put out wrong and stupid information because they are too lazy to check it, they get butthurt when people complain about how obvious it is, etc. My favourite is the very same people will denounce something because they detect certain spellings or style they think is indicative of ai.

I suspect giving chatbots to midwits was part of the planned gay-ification of everything.

Bill Castle
Bill Castle
February 22, 2024 11:40 am

So far I have not read anything composed by AI, or written by a human who was assisted by AI, that even comes close to the intelligence in the lyrics of one song by Jimmy Buffett.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
  Bill Castle
February 22, 2024 9:02 pm

Jimmy Buffet, kill all the bill fish you can catch, fuck him. Plus the music is shit, go have a margarita or a whatever, the man is a fucking leach.

Anthony Aaron
Anthony Aaron
February 22, 2024 11:54 am

Tent … meet camel’s nose …

Anonymous
Anonymous
February 22, 2024 1:14 pm

Google’s Gemini AI
https://www.unz.com/isteve/google-gemini/

https://www.unz.com/isteve/google-gemini/#comments

EIEIO
EIEIO
February 22, 2024 3:28 pm

Have we not learned yet that “free” tools are not free? They exist to extract a toll. What is the toll in the realm of AI? I’ll posit that it’s not a creation tool as much as a collection device.

zappalives
zappalives
February 22, 2024 4:38 pm

Just another BOTTOMLESS RABBITHOLE to waste your time on.
Here is all you need to know………….
Your government ………at nearly every level hates your fucking guts and wants you DEAD.

FarmerChet
FarmerChet
February 22, 2024 4:44 pm

This article is a mess. Note the numbered section of issues with AI – if ONE of those facts exists then no thinking adult will assume its anything more than a video game.
Every internet-connected thing is leaking your data, and supposed-AI is just another way to get your data.
Remember in the 1980’s when IBM announced Big Blue? It was to be the next thing in machine learning and was promoted the same as AI is today.
It failed at most tasks except chess. It was able to beat a chess master one time, but essentially could not consistently win a chess game with any person.
All that computing power (then and now) and we still don’t have software applications which can consistently win a game of chess.
ChatGPT is a novelty which renders grammar. People with autisim can do that too!

Think while it's still legal
Think while it's still legal
February 22, 2024 7:00 pm

…predicted that 47% of the American workforce might be replaced by AI over the next two decades, that prediction “appears to have been off-base … because human judgement still needs to be applied to these technologies to avoid error and bias.”

The biggest problem with predictions and technology, especially of this sort, is that the human mind is only comfortable with linear progressions. Technology like this generally has an exponential growth – at least at first. (Usually it’s more an S-curve, but the initial portion looks exponentially and can last 20, 50 or more years before it starts tapering off.)

It would not surprise me if the AI takeover of jobs is much faster and penetrates much further into the job market than anyone thinks, than anyone had predicted. 15 years ago I was teaching a robotics course and showed the kids how it is possible that long before they have a chance to retire, pretty much any job they had could be replaced by AI or robots. The lesson was that even if they pursue something as cutting edge as robotics, they needed to stay nimble their entire lives and be ready to retrain for other work, possibly multiple times before they retire. Exponential growth just doesn’t compute for humans. ¹

The only jobs I could think of that might possibly avoid this fate was politicians and high-end lawyers because maybe they could make laws against it for themselves and those laws possibly might survive, at least at first. (At least at the highest levels.)

1) if you want a quick test and are even somewhat good at math, to see this, imagine that you are chained to a seat, high up in the nose-bleed section of your local baseball stadium, and someone put a single magic drop of water on first base that doubled in volume once a minute. How long do you think you have to pick the combination lock? When the stadium is half full, how much longer do you have before you have to worry? And just for fun, try to work out how many ‘years’ until the earth is covered at least a deep as during Noah’s flood? (Simplifying assumptions, just take a sphere 4000 miles in radius and cover it 6 miles deep). Write your guesses down, then do a bit of math to see how close you are. (If anyone does this, and is willing to share what they thought, and what they calculated, is live to hear, and others will probably be surprised by their answers.)

T4C
T4C
February 22, 2024 7:28 pm

Will you EVAH see ChatGPT respond with something like this???😝🤣 Short answer…….No fucking way, Jose!

Andrew Torba reposted

Jerm Warfare@RealJermWarfare

Feb 21

Gab has the best AI engine I’ve seen to date. 😂

comment image

comment image

Archaeopteryx Phoenix
Archaeopteryx Phoenix
  T4C
February 22, 2024 7:35 pm

Correct, baby.

https://theunredacted.com/titanic-conspiracy-the-ship-that-never-sank/

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
  Archaeopteryx Phoenix
February 22, 2024 9:09 pm

Looks like a burning platform, eh?

OK
OK
February 22, 2024 7:55 pm

As long as you understand that it’s someone’s else’s input, fine.
Anything else is stupid