I genuinely think either of those or some strange fusion of them would literally be perfect. All I ask is that if you do do something inspired by my comment, tag me when you post images.
every once and a while talia jane [hi, ik you namesearch from an alt] starts some discourse again and I feel the need to remind everyone she wrote an article [trying to] explaining away her mom trying to cover up a spree killing. www.cracked.com/personal-exp...
Note that because gradients flow back to previous positions, it's somewhat misleading to say LLMs are purely next-token predictors (even though they output one token at a time). Rather, they are sequence predictors.
When processing token N, attention doesn’t just receive information from tokens (1…N), it also receives information from intermediate representations of (1…N) at prior layers. With autoregression, this allows a model to “set up” useful representations for future generations
yeah - I was impressed by the token-prediction as being as powerful as it is, but there's more going on than that and I don't really follow it any more.
It's always good to see priests who still remember there are *seven* Catholic social principles. Also, that noise you hear is the USCCB screeching to the Vatican and getting back nothing, lol
Chicago priest Fr. Larry Dowling describes procession to ICE facility: “No one had the courage to speak directly to us. No one from Homeland Security could stand in the presence of the Monstrance holding the Blessed Sacrament. No wonder. Evil is repelled, recoils in the presence of Christ.”
For any Catholic, the sight of a Eucharistic Procession being turned away at the gates of the destination is the embodiment of Jesus being denied entrance. You don't have to be Catholic to get the symbolism in that!
What Fr Dowling is doing here was not just "offering communion to detainees". A full on Eucharistic Procession is a really fucking big deal. In Catholic theological framing, those folks were the honor guard with the very great privilege of escorting Jesus himself to the detention center.
For those in the audience - basically the bread & wine are really the body and blood, regardless of the faith or status of the one consuming it - by the words of institution "this is my body" and "this is my blood." Think of it as a magical thing that happens in fulfillment of a divine promise.
I think you're probably painting with too wide a brush on protestants. Lutherans, for example, don't believe in transubstantiation but do believe in sacramental union.