You and I can't learn to ride a bike by reading thousands of books about cycling and Newtonian physics, but a robot driven by an LLM-like process certainly can.
In practice it would make heavy use of RL, as humans do.
> In practice it would make heavy use of RL, as humans do.
Oh, so you mean, it would be in a harness of some sort that lets it connect to sensors that tell it things about its position, speed, balance and etc? Well, yes, but then it isn't an LLM anymore, because it has more than language to model things!
> In practice it would make heavy use of RL, as humans do.
Oh, so you mean, it would be in a harness of some sort that lets it connect to sensors that tell it things about its position, speed, balance and etc? Well, yes, but then it isn't an LLM anymore, because it has more than language to model things!