Recent Comments

  • Hoosier on Adobe Walls and “Slate Sketches”: The Gritty Reality of Building the Salt Lake Temple: “Jonathan, times like these make me wish the combox allowed for images.Jan 25, 16:42
  • Observatory on The Church Doesn’t Need Your Panic: A Response to Jonathan Green: “I agree with Brother Deane’s post.Jan 25, 14:46
  • Stephen C. on The First AI-Written Mormon Horror Novel: “RLD: “Our cosmology isn’t very good for horror–our demons are known quantities. There’s a reason we do science fiction and fantasy instead.” That’s a good point. Also, a lot of horror elements are seen as untoward for Latter-day Saint culture. It’s not a coincidence that probably the best Mormon horror writer, Brian Evenson, was pressured out of BYU and left the Church. I’ve used AI to teach my stats class. I used a “reverse classroom” approach where the students would basically come up to me with the problems in their code and I would help them out, but this would mean that most of the class was spent dealing with syntax, whereas now we can literally get to original regression analysis within an introduction course. Of course, as you note AI causes its own problems. My son takes pictures of his homework sheets and has it help him out, but I have to literally go through his search history like I’m looking for porn to make sure it’s not just solving it for him. Anon: That’s one of the big problems, we don’t really know what goes into the black box of AI, so it couldn’t even tell us very well where exactly its inspiration came from. Sute: I do think that as AI automates more things it does force us to really question what defines us and is meaningful. If your identity was tied to being a fast coder, well, that’s pretty shot at this point, and then lather, rinse, and repeat for every other skill as AI generalizes. As somebody whose ideal life would be sitting in a parlor talking to friends and family every evening, I’m fine with that, but I can sympathize with others whose self-image was tied to something that could go the way of the English cottage industries. REC911: I kind of missed Jonathan’s “Jay’s Journal” comment but then looked it up. Looks like an interesting piece of Utah Mormon horror folklore! odd that I hadn’t heard of it before. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jay%27s_Journal.Jan 25, 14:06
  • Chad Nielsen on Adobe Walls and “Slate Sketches”: The Gritty Reality of Building the Salt Lake Temple: “Last Lemming, because the comparison is with standard Monzonite, of course, not granite. Monzonite has <5% quartz, while Quartz Monzonite is 5-20% quartz. (Plus, there's also a Foid-bearing Monzonite.)Jan 25, 12:30
  • REC911 on The First AI-Written Mormon Horror Novel: “I thought I was the only member that ever read Jay’s Journal ! What a blast from the past.Jan 25, 11:13
  • Last Lemming on Adobe Walls and “Slate Sketches”: The Gritty Reality of Building the Salt Lake Temple: “At the risk of reinforcing Jonathan’s point–if the temple stone contains less quartz than granite, why do we need to acknowledge quartz in the name of the mineral? Just call it monzonite and be accurate enough to forgo the explanatory note.Jan 25, 09:01
  • Jonathan Green on Adobe Walls and “Slate Sketches”: The Gritty Reality of Building the Salt Lake Temple: “It’s easy to forget that the average person probably only knows the formulas for olivine and one or two feldspars.Jan 25, 08:21
  • Sute on The First AI-Written Mormon Horror Novel: “AI will cause many of us to lose our humanity and others to fully discover it. In many ways, AI will be able to do things better than most and eventually all of us. But all that truly matters is our lived experience. Fascinating, that is essentially what God sent us here to do!Jan 24, 21:40
  • Anon on The First AI-Written Mormon Horror Novel: “You should include as part of the prompt a requirement to note sources the AI refers to come up with its iteration.Jan 24, 20:17
  • Jack on Vigilance is not panic: “That’s a great comment, Jonathan. That’s where I’m trying keep myself–though I know I don’t always have my feet squarely on the line where the truth cuts through all the mucky-muck. But I suppose that will always be a challenge where the line divides a solid waste landfill from sewage treatment facility.Jan 24, 17:40