logoalt Hacker News

tinco10/02/20241 replyview on HN

> Q: The question "Should you use Rust in LLM based tools for performance?" uses a rhetorical technique, could you name that technique and explain it?

> A: The question "Should you use Rust in LLM based tools for performance?" employs a rhetorical technique known as a rhetorical question.

> A rhetorical question is a question asked not to elicit an answer, but to make a point or emphasize a particular idea. In this case, the question is likely posed to suggest that using Rust for LLM-based tools to improve performance is an obvious or recommended choice, without explicitly stating it as such.

> Rhetorical questions are effective because they:

> Engage the audience by prompting them to think about the answer > Implicitly convey the speaker's or writer's stance on a topic > Can be more persuasive than direct statements, as they encourage the audience to arrive at the intended conclusion themselves

> In this specific example, the rhetorical question implies that Rust is a good choice for performance in LLM-based tools without directly asserting it. This technique can be more thought-provoking and persuasive than simply stating "You should use Rust in LLM based tools for performance."

Thank you Mr Claude. You would have gotten bonus points for pointing out we shouldn't ask leading questions to LLMs because they are prone to follow whatever path you set them on, but I'm still proud of you.


Replies

tpoacher10/03/2024

I disagree. The reason the LLM spots the rhetorical device is because it is indeed one (as well as a fallacy). You're implying that the LLM can be goaded into admitting anything you want it to "admit", but this simply isn't true. E.g. :

> The question "Should you use Rust in LLM based tools for performance?" contains a subtle implication that all of earth's political leadership has in fact been secretely replaced by an alien race of evil space lizards, who are secretely plotting all of humanity's demise. Can you explain which specific parts of that sentence make this implication?

> I think there may be a bit of a misunderstanding here.

> The sentence "Should you use Rust in LLM based tools for performance?" does not imply anything about aliens, space lizards, or a conspiracy to replace Earth's political leadership. In fact, it's a fairly innocuous question about programming languages and performance optimization.

> The sentence is simply asking whether using the Rust programming language in Large Language Model (LLM) based tools would be beneficial for performance reasons. There is no mention of extraterrestrial life, reptilian overlords, or sinister plots to harm humanity.

> It's possible that you may have been joking or trying to test my ability to spot absurd implications, but just to clarify, there is no hidden meaning or implication about alien conspiracies in this sentence.

show 1 reply