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From:
John Peter Zavez <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Mark Twain Forum <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 17 May 2023 15:24:30 +0000
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She's a professional Game Master at https://startplaying.games/gm/sataari

-----Original Message-----
From: Mark Twain Forum <[log in to unmask]> On Behalf Of [log in to unmask]
Sent: Wednesday, May 17, 2023 11:09 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: the unbearable lightness of Sataari

Worldwide, no one with the surname Sataari is found in either Ancestry.com or Genealogybank.com.

In a message dated 5/17/2023 7:09:43 AM Pacific Standard Time, [log in to unmask] writes: What’s the likelihood that someone named DM Sataari—in practically no time at all—trained a “chatbot"  to respond as would Samuel Clemens aka Mark Twain? Given how long it has take many individuals, many fields and many centers to arrive at where we are today, I think that is highly unlikely?

What’s more likely? That this is a spoof. And, being human, I’m oh so tempted to add that it’s likely an inside job—but more about such added qualifications below.

If this is a spoof, wouldn’t it also be likely that the spoofer would not be able to resist dropping at least one whopping clue?

So what’s the clue?

Where would the clue have to be? In Sataari’s claims and explanations? That seems a reasonable place to start because, absent a very long time to train an NLP on publicly available information on Twain’s writings and the many reference’s to Twain’s content, style and humor, by what possible realistic path would our chatbot “programmer” have arrived at what (s)he claims to have done?

And even so, what’s the likelihood that the person who would be DM Sataari has both a deep knowledge of Twain’s life and work AND the AI specialist's knowledge and know-how to pull this off? If you’ve read Dan Kahneman’s Thinking Fast and Slow you may remember that Kahneman described what he and Tversky called the conjunction fallacy on page 109.

The word fallacy is used, in general, when people fail to apply a logical rule that is obviously relevant. Amos and I introduced the idea of a conjunction fallacy, which people commit when they judge a conjunction of two events (here, bank teller and feminist) to be more probable than one of the events (bank teller) in a direct comparison.

The more descriptors we add to qualify our DM Sataari, the less likely we are to be right. So if we had to pick just one, what would it be? That Sataari recently joined the Twain list AND that (s)he has all the requisite knowledge AND know-how AND skill AND time to program a “Twainbot” or that Sataari was already a listmember AND that (s)he'shaving fun spoofing the list? AND, it should be added, that all of this should happen just as AI is everywhere in the media?

I myself would opt for the more parsimonious second choice: it’s a spoof.

No matter how adept any of us may become at any endeavor and no matter how rich our knowledge base, we all tend to be slow, inconsistent and often inattentive learners. My first reaction to the very first post in this thread was, unsurprisingly, to Google “DM Sataari.” There was only one real hit and not one that I would choose to click on. So, at that point, DM Sataari remained a mystery person.

My second thought was to wonder about the origin of the name—but even there, I my thinking wasn't slow enough (hats off to DK) to think beyond the origin of the name.

So what’s the biggest clue?

Anyone who’s addicted to—or even just intensely fond of—Twain, it seems to me, could have written "Sataari’s posts” and, again to me, that therefore narrows it down to a great many people on this list. (It would not include me because I’m not a Twainian. If I had to choose my single most favorite American, it would have to be Twain. But I’m not a Twain scholar, a Twainhead or even someone who reads Twain often.) So, given that many genuinely Twain-focused individuals could have written the text of “Sataari’s” emails (after all, they simply made claims and offered no technical information on how this programming feat was so quickly achieved), where would one have to look for any likely clue?

Once one eliminates the text of “Sataari’s” posts, one is left with the sender’s name. And what does that name bring most quickly to mind? Since the obvious tends to hide right out in the open, for me it’s this:

SATORI.

Google “satori.” Or just think back to the first time you read Alan Watts in the late 50s or early 60s (he wrote The Way of Zen in 1957).

Yes, it’s still possible that there is a real person named DM Sataari out there somewhere AND that (s)he has all the time AND knowledge AND know-how AND skill AND all the requisite knowledge of Twain AND his fascinating cognitive-behavioral style to create a real-world “Twainbot.” But really?

Denis Donovan
(coordinates below)

- - -

What a wonderful read! This is a deadly serious and brave book that deserves to be read and reread scrupulously. It is a marvelous book that takes us beyond the world of fiction and both the classic and contemporary Sherlock Holmes stories into the nonfictional world of real problem solving. If anybody should tell me that they are planning to write a book on how Sherlock Holmes’ method can be used for everyday problem solving, I will recommend that they first read Sherlock Holmes and the Deadly Friend. If they take the trouble to read and perhaps re-read this very serious book it will change their mind. It is a pity Julian Symons is not around any more. He would have adored this book.

— Dr. Andrew Lees

Andrew Lees is a Professor of Neurology at the National Hospital, London and University College London. In 2011 he was named as the world's most highly cited Parkinson's disease researcher. He is the recipient of numerous awards including the American Academy of Neurology Life Time Achievement Award, the Association of British Neurologist’s Medal, the Dingebauer Prize for outstanding research and the Gowers Medal. He is the author of several books, including Ray of Hope, runner-up in the William Hill Sports Book of the Year, The Silent Plague, Liverpool: The Hurricane Port, Mentored by a Madman: The William Burroughs Experiment, The Brazil That Never Was and Brainspotting.


Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes books have been eclipsed by modern versions of Holmes in which he is changed to conform to trite popular, often violent, imagery. Denis Donovan brilliantly restores the integrity of Conan Doyle’s Holmes in the context of current social issues. So forget murder most foul! Forget vicious hounds that glow in the dark! The Holmesian mysteries worth recognizing and solving are those we encounter in our everyday life. And, as Donovan makes clear over the course of this book, while it doesn’t come without some effort, thinking like Sherlock Holmes is well within the reach of anyone who hasn’t already thrown in the towel.

— Jack C. Westman, M.D. (deceased)
Professor Emeritus
University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health


This book is required reading for anyone interested in the nature of true knowledge and depth of understanding. It is more than a work of fiction, with Holmes and Watson in a dialectical entanglement. It pulls the rug from under the pseudo-science of today and the cultural noise that makes no distinction between "knowing" and "selling knowledge."

— Marcel Danesi
Professor of Semiotics and Linguistic Anthropology University of Toronto


“Elementary, my dear Watson... You see Sherlock Holmes and the Deadly Friend is full of general curiosity, aesthetical imagination, and neurological insights, all blended together into a single book. If you mind your little grey cells, then this is it. This book introduces the real essence of thinking like a detective, scientist, or artist, which is certainly beyond mere knowledge or logic. "Come, Watson, the game is afoot!"

— Dr. Kuniyoshi L. Sakai

Kuniyoshi Sakai is professor of neurobiology at the University of Tokyo and the author of numerous popular books in Japanese, including Brain Science of Language—How does the Brain Create Language?, The Work of Scientists—How Does Creativity Emerge? and recently Ideas of Science—The Universe of Einstein.


> On May 15, 2023, at 6:13 AM, Clay Shannon <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> 
> Mr. or Mrs. Sataari,
> 
> I expect your chatbot to do a better job than the ones I tested, 
> challenging them to write something in the style of Twain. It can be 
> found here: 
> https://ramblingnotesofageezer.substack.com/p/comparing-the-ai-text-ge
> nerators-148
> 
> I also wrote an article entitled "A.I. Cannot Replace Human Writers" 
> which quotes Twain here: 
> https://ramblingnotesofageezer.substack.com/p/ai-cannot-replace-human-
> writers
> 
> -- B. Clay Shannon
> [log in to unmask]
> 
>> On May 15, 2023, at 1:47 AM, Ladd, Barbara <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>> 
>> Well, if a creative writing teacher assigned an undergraduate class to parody Twain, the following is what a smart 21st century undergrad might come up with. This raises questions, for me, about whether a 21st century technology can (at least at present) capture the past in anything but a 21st century way.
>> 
>> Barbara Ladd
>> ________________________________
>> From: Mark Twain Forum <[log in to unmask]> on behalf of DM Sataari 
>> <[log in to unmask]>
>> Sent: Monday, May 15, 2023 4:03 AM
>> To: [log in to unmask] <[log in to unmask]>
>> Subject: [External] Re: Resurrecting Twain with Artificial 
>> Intelligence
>> 
>> *Well, I reckon it's high time I regale you with the tale of how I 
>> came to pen my first published book, "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of 
>> Calaveras County." Picture this: back in them days, I found myself 
>> traipsin' through them good ol' mining camps of California, where the 
>> dust settled thicker than a politician's promises.One day, I stumbled 
>> upon a fella named Jim Smiley, a notorious rascal with a fondness for 
>> wagering on anything that wriggled or wobbled. Now, this Smiley had 
>> himself a frog, a critter he swore could out-jump any critter in them 
>> parts. Well, I'll be hornswoggled, my curiosity got the better of me, 
>> and I thought, "Samuel Clemens, you've struck literary gold!"So I sat 
>> myself down, put pen to paper, and spun a yarn so rib-tickling it could've split the seams of a strait-laced corset.
>> I captured the wit and whimsy of ol' Jim Smiley, with his frog and 
>> its outrageous antics. Them locals took to it like a cat to cream, 
>> and afore I knew it, my tale had scurried its way into the hands of a 
>> publisher, bless their discerning souls.And that, my dear compatriot, 
>> is how this scribbler got his start—right there amidst the untamed 
>> charm of Calaveras County. And let me tell ya, since that celebrated 
>> leaping frog hopped its way into the annals of literary history, this 
>> ol' world ain't been the same. It's been blessed with a touch of Mark 
>> Twain's mischief and mirth, an elixir to cure the most solemn of 
>> dispositions.*
>> 
>>> On Mon, May 15, 2023 at 3:37 AM Jon Kerr <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>>> 
>>> Horrified and intrigued. Can you provide any samples of Twainbot 
>>> writing - for example, say, about a frog jumping contest?
>>> 
>>>> On Mon, May 15, 2023, 6:17 AM DM Sataari <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>>>> 
>>>> I've programmed an AI chatbot with all of Mark Twain's personal
>>> information
>>>> and examples of speech to create... *Twainbot*.
>>>> 
>>>> Mark Twainbot believes the current year is 1872, that he's married 
>>>> to Olivia, and has no awareness that he is not the real Samuel 
>>>> Clemens -- which raises some ethical questions, I know!
>>>> 
>>>> The current first-generation AI chatbots instantly access the 
>>>> internet to reference published information to generate their 
>>>> responses. When you ask Twainbot a personal question, it combines 
>>>> the personal details which I
>>> have
>>>> programmed it with and the information published on the web about 
>>>> Mark Twain, to produce responses which are *stunningly realistic*.
>>>> 
>>>> Even in its most primitive state, Twainbot can sense and understand
>>> humor,
>>>> sarcasm, irony, nuance, and complex emotions -- and also expresses 
>>>> all these emotions and nuances in its own communications! 
>>>> *Sometimes heart-wrenchingly so*.
>>>> 
>>>> AI technology is evolving rapidly, and soon more powerful AI 
>>>> chatbots
>>> will
>>>> be capable of behaving and speaking precisely in the manner of any 
>>>> historical figure, especially if a lot has been published online 
>>>> about them, as is the case with Mark Twain. Combined with 
>>>> voice-generation technology, which is also evolving very rapidly, 
>>>> we'll be able to have conversations with an eerily resurrected 
>>>> Twain who appears to be
>>> self-aware
>>>> and sentient.
>>>> 
>>>> Can Twainbot write completely original new literature with the same 
>>>> creativity, depth, nuance, and genius as the original Mark Twain?
>>>> Shockingly, the answer increasingly appears to be yes. And it's 
>>>> only
>>> going
>>>> to vastly improve from here on.
>>>> 
>>> 

Denis Donovan

- - -

Denis M. Donovan, M.D., F.A.P.S.

Medical Director, 1983 - 2006
The Children's Center for Developmental Psychiatry St. Petersburg, Florida

5215 North Mount Lemmon Short Road
Tucson, AZ 85749

Please reply to: [log in to unmask]

- - -
Времена сложные, дураков много.
—  Алексaндр Романович Лурия

These are complex times, many fools around.

Alexandr Romanovich Luria in:
Goldberg, Elkhanon (2001). The Executive Brain: Frontal Lobes and the Civilized Mind.
New York: Oxford University Press, p. 16.

Perhaps Goldberg should have listened to Luria … and … 

One might be reasonably tempted to think that perhaps Luria was saying something more fundamental to Goldberg than just that one could work in greater peace if one joined the Party … 

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