Fair enough, I suppose. As malkie said on the other thread, this stuff goes beyond my pay grade pretty fast. I'm simply suggesting that philosophical argument can only get you so far. You, just like every other person on the planet, only has that three pound mass contained inside your skull to think with.Gadianton wrote: ↑Sat Feb 28, 2026 9:13 pmBefore your AI can draw conclusions, it needs to understand what's being argued, and it fails 100% at representing anything I've said. That's not the AIs fault, it's your fault because you tried to make it evaluate pages and pages of a meandering conversation, most of which has moved away from the points that I was making in the OP, and you also colored its expectations with your question.
Allow me to show you how to use your AI.
First say this:
"I'm going to paste in an essay, please summarize it for me in 500 words or less, do not praise it or criticize it, just explain what it means."
Then paste in my OP.
Then paste the output here so that I can agree or disagree on its accuracy as a summary.
To help: I performed this exact exercise with DeepSeek just now and I'm happy enough with its output. I'm sure your AI will do fine.
Blake wants to mold Mormonism to contemporary Christian apologetics as much as possible. I think Mormonism should stay true to its mythological roots. Other than breaking down Blake's views, which I already understand, what is there to be gained by this? I can tell you one thing: there is not enough material published by Blake online to create an AI Blake to counter my arguments because Blake has never encountered anything like I'm proposing before and written about.
It's not that AI can't be useful, but you have serious comprehension problems when it comes to AI's obvious limitations.
I would suggest that this being the case that you might want to consider the fact that this can only get you so far. Fair enough? I would imagine that Blake Ostler would have the humility to answer and affirmative, "Yes".
Million dollar question, right?
Regards,
MG