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[return to "Chomsky on what ChatGPT is good for (2023)"]
1. 0xDEAF+g6[view] [source] 2025-05-25 17:56:44
>>mef+(OP)
I confess my opinion of Noam Chomsky dropped a lot from reading this interview. The way he set up a "Tom Jones" strawman and kept dismissing positions using language like "we'd laugh", "total absurdity", etc. was really disappointing. I always assumed that academics were only like that on reddit, and in real life they actually made a serious effort at rigorous argument, avoiding logical fallacies and the like. Yet here is Chomsky addressing a lay audience that has no linguistics background, and instead of even attempting to summarize the arguments for his position, he simply asserts that opposing views are risible with little supporting argument. I expected much more from a big-name scholar.

"The first principle is that you must not fool yourself, and you are the easiest person to fool."

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2. protoc+xU[view] [source] 2025-05-26 00:26:09
>>0xDEAF+g6
Havent read the interview, but interviews arent formal debates and I would never expect someone to hold themselves to that same standard.

The same way that reddit comments arent a formal debate.

Mocking is absolutely useful. Sometimes you debate someone like graham hancock and force him to confirm that he has no evidence for his hypotheses, then when you discuss the debate, you mock him relentlessly for having no evidence for his hypotheses.

> Yet here is Chomsky addressing a lay audience that has no linguistics background

So not a formal debate or paper where I would expect anyone to hold to debate principles.

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