Abstract: Anthropomorphic
effects of GPT-3, a third-generation natural language modelling system, are
leaving a lasting impact on public discourse, communication, and
education. This paper investigates
conversational aspects of linguistic AI’s ability to construct believable
representations of real people. Engaging
conversations with Plato, Queen Min or Princes Diana are now more possible than
ever. The GPT-3 conversational simulacra
seem to possess a form of intentionality (a will to be understood). Social, philosophical and ethical
implications of this new generation of conversational simulacra are discussed
within a broad historical tradition of the phenomena of identity transfers:
from Eastern mythology to the visions of post-human in contemporary critical
discourse.
The
paper focuses on the possible impact of AI’s mimetic representations on
existing notions of identity, agency, immortality. As such, it hopes to bridge
the gap between discourses and bring AI closer to Humanities, and Humanities to
AI.
Keywords: GPT-3, avatar, chatbots,
posthuman, AI |