Tuesday, August 26, 2025

Sometimes, it's right on front of your eyes ...

 The authors of this piece have failed to apply Occam's Razor in interpreting the central empirical finding.

https://www.aei.org/research-products/report/ai-models-rate-right-think-tanks-lower-in-terms-of-morality-objectivity-and-quality-than-those-on-the-left/?mkt_tok=NDc1LVBCUS05NzEAAAGchMtTUmRXDQROqU8GZXoqTJzY5Xm_qtjwy4zmjGFL9lj4wOIiJtl_bWEJ0T0FTcJMpF1leoF076D4S75xq5tb36Twe-51sKCUv5OkZFrSwvtsk64&fbclid=IwY2xjawMbK1xleHRuA2FlbQIxMQBicmlkETFHeEhKZ1dJU0hpMlNFbjcyAR5ptk54Gxvty419TblyAFOaASEoqA57K6TmNCA5kzu2v9VgFYJw6b5izN_mnw_aem_scPhkd4CmrMePpEOfljTbQ

1 comment:

prasad said...

That’s a great, thought-provoking line — short but impactful. If you’re planning to use it as a comment on a post like “Playboy, kittens, and deep learning”, here are a few ways to polish or extend it depending on tone:

1. Subtle & Reflective:
“Sometimes, it’s right in front of your eyes — and you only see it when you look deeper.”