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A rather categorical statement given that you didn't say anything with regards to how you think.
Maybe wait until we actually know more what's going on under the hood - both in LLMs and in the human brain - before stating with such confident finality that there's absolutely no similarities.
If it turns out that LLMs aren't thinking, but they're still producing the same sort of interaction that humans are capable of, perhaps that says more about humans than it does about LLMs.
I've been making the same or similar arguments you are here in a lot of places. I use LLMs every day for my job, and it's quite clear that beyond a certain scale, there's definitely more going on than "fancy autocomplete."
I'm not sure what's up with people hating on AI all of a sudden, but there seems quite a few who are confidently giving out incorrect information. I find it most amusing when they're doing that at the same time as bashing LLMs for also confidently giving out wrong information.
Can you give examples of that?
The one I like to give is tool use. I can present the LLM with a problem and give it a number of tools it can use to solve the problem and it is pretty good at that. Here's an older writeup that mentions a lot of others: https://www.jasonwei.net/blog/emergence