LLM Type post Author William A. Dembski Date April 3, 2024 CategoriesIntelligent DesignMathematicsNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , Abigail Shrier, Aristotle, biotechnology, Bismarck, books, ChatGPT4, Claudine Gay, college campuses, DALL-E, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Gemini, gender dysphoria, gender-affirming care, Google, hallucinations, Harvard University, intelligent design, large language models, Marc Tessier-Lavigne, medicine, Microsoft, North Dakota, Stanford University, theology, truth, verification, Wall Street Journal, websites, Wikipedia, William A. Dembski Truth and Trust in Large Language Models William A. Dembski April 3, 2024 Intelligent Design, Mathematics, Neuroscience & Mind 21 How much truth is ChatGPT or Gemini giving us? How much can we trust their answers to queries? As we'll see, LLMs can lay no claim to truth. Read More ›
swiss-cheese Type post Author David Coppedge Date January 4, 2024 CategoriesBotanyEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , blood clotting, California, Darwinism, devolution, Douglas Axe, error correction, evolutionary biologists, fitness landscape, Gaussian curves, intelligent design, Irreducible Complexity, metaphors, Michael Behe, mount improbable, mousetrap, North Dakota, Paris, phenotypes, PNAS, Richard Dawkins, savannah, Sewall Wright Trapdoors in the Fitness Landscape: Scientists Revive Worries About an Evolutionary Metaphor David Coppedge January 4, 2024 Botany, Evolution, Intelligent Design 9 What if the structure of the landscape is like a block of Swiss cheese, flat and riddled with holes? Read More ›
Fargo Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date September 11, 2023 CategoriesBioethicsMedicineScience Reporting Tagged , Bismarck, climate change, coffee shop, COVID-19, elitism, experts, Harvard University, journals, media, Naomi Oreskes, North Dakota, Republicans, Scientific American, scientific enterprise, South Dakota, Wesley Smith Harvard Prof Will Explain Science to Baffled Small City America David Klinghoffer September 11, 2023 Bioethics, Medicine, Science Reporting 3 Professor Oreskes writes articles with titles like “The Reason Some Republicans Mistrust Science: Their Leaders Tell Them To.” Read More ›