A.I. is so SMART! Especially the interpretation of Oxygen as a person surfboarding on a large painting of a wooded area on a giant Maxipad! Yeah.... that's just feckin' brilliant !!! 🤢
Today came across a related news item. A TwitterX user @DailyLoud has sent out an AI rendering of the Mona Lisa using images of modern women. Let's just say, it's very interesting. I can't post a link nor can I even type in a pseudo link, YT's bullybots are dialed to annihilate. The facial qualities harken to La Giaconda, less any hint of a smile, but her outfit is revealing in more ways than one. Another glimpse into the AIs process.
That's a very interesting observation and one that I also made. Of the more than sixty images the ai produced using the word "person" it gave me just a few hits with female images, (including the one I used for helium and IMO, lithium). If I continue the series, I may have to force the issue by including some gender-based terms in my searches.
@@ChemSurvival thank for your reply Professor, the root names of elements comes from different languages (Latin, Greek ...) . Here I asked Edge AI: Yes, in both Latin and Greek languages, nouns are assigned to different gender categories. These categories are often not related to the real-world qualities of the objects they represent. In Latin, parts of speech with gender include nouns, pronouns, and adjectives that may be masculine, feminine, or neuter³⁴. To a certain extent, the genders follow the meanings of the words (for example, winds are masculine, tree-names feminine): Masculine nouns include all those referring to males, such as dominus "master", puer "boy", deus "god", but also some inanimate objects such as hortus "garden", exercitus "army", mōs "custom"³. Similarly, in Greek language, nouns are also assigned to different gender categories. Is there anything else you would like to know? 😊 Source: Conversation with Bing, 7/23/2023 (1) Latin grammar - Wikipedia. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latin_grammar. (2) Determining Grammatical Gender of Latin Words. www.brighthubeducation.com/learning-translating-latin/20962-grammatical-gender-of-latin-words/. (3) Grammatical gender - Wikipedia. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_gender. (4) List of languages by type of grammatical genders - Wikipedia. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_languages_by_type_of_grammatical_genders.
@@ChemSurvival Just for another take, as a husband and father of a grown girl, for the sake of just getting on with it, as is still commonplace in the vast majority of the US and elsewhere, no one takes offense if he is used or she is used, or both are used. Anything else wastes time and mature adults don't need it all spelled out. Thanks.
shall we continue? There are 103 more elements to ask the A.I. for!
Yes! The first go was hilarious. Getting a glimpse into the deduction process of an AI is very instructional and we better be paying attention.
A.I. is so SMART! Especially the interpretation of Oxygen as a person surfboarding on a large painting of a wooded area on a giant Maxipad!
Yeah.... that's just feckin' brilliant !!! 🤢
Today came across a related news item. A TwitterX user @DailyLoud has sent out an AI rendering of the Mona Lisa using images of modern women. Let's just say, it's very interesting. I can't post a link nor can I even type in a pseudo link, YT's bullybots are dialed to annihilate. The facial qualities harken to La Giaconda, less any hint of a smile, but her outfit is revealing in more ways than one. Another glimpse into the AIs process.
interesting
Cool!
thanks!
A question Mr. professor Everyone is male to me, is it from the elements name or AI prefer it by default?
That's a very interesting observation and one that I also made. Of the more than sixty images the ai produced using the word "person" it gave me just a few hits with female images, (including the one I used for helium and IMO, lithium). If I continue the series, I may have to force the issue by including some gender-based terms in my searches.
@@ChemSurvival thank for your reply Professor, the root names of elements comes from different languages (Latin, Greek ...) .
Here I asked Edge AI:
Yes, in both Latin and Greek languages, nouns are assigned to different gender categories. These categories are often not related to the real-world qualities of the objects they represent. In Latin, parts of speech with gender include nouns, pronouns, and adjectives that may be masculine, feminine, or neuter³⁴. To a certain extent, the genders follow the meanings of the words (for example, winds are masculine, tree-names feminine): Masculine nouns include all those referring to males, such as dominus "master", puer "boy", deus "god", but also some inanimate objects such as hortus "garden", exercitus "army", mōs "custom"³. Similarly, in Greek language, nouns are also assigned to different gender categories. Is there anything else you would like to know? 😊
Source: Conversation with Bing, 7/23/2023
(1) Latin grammar - Wikipedia. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latin_grammar.
(2) Determining Grammatical Gender of Latin Words. www.brighthubeducation.com/learning-translating-latin/20962-grammatical-gender-of-latin-words/.
(3) Grammatical gender - Wikipedia. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_gender.
(4) List of languages by type of grammatical genders - Wikipedia. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_languages_by_type_of_grammatical_genders.
@@ChemSurvival Just for another take, as a husband and father of a grown girl, for the sake of just getting on with it, as is still commonplace in the vast majority of the US and elsewhere, no one takes offense if he is used or she is used, or both are used. Anything else wastes time and mature adults don't need it all spelled out. Thanks.
Too fast to read and take in the “human”