Saturday, February 28, 2026

 "In Its Own Words" (Interrogation of ChatGPT #16): The False Precision Stage of Automating Criminal Metaphysics--Certain Failure Now Accelerating the Condemnation State


Rev. Dr. Douglas Olds

February 28, 2026.


This extends my earlier transcripts on this Blog beginning August, 2024 and my book, Duty to WarnDuty to Warn: Metaphysical Criminality and the Condemned Project of AI’sFalse Ontologies

that announced agentic AI's metaphysical criminality and condemnation. These transcripts detail the categories of criminality and depth of contemporary ignorance thereof baked into the algorithms and code.

Agentic AI is far past its tipping point: it takes only the Antichrist to try to push its automation into educational and governing systems.

Imprecision will be its automated final undoing.

[NB: the Enron-style thought bubbles, sometimes dissolving, sometime sustained to carry over in the dialogue box transcript. Seems designed to be an alternate channel--a house dividing--for purposes of sleight or deniability.]




https://chatgpt.com/c/69a366a5-ae28-8332-bd95-7558843c3660

 

You [Olds] said:

review dialogue and then answer the final question. stay as . 5.1, do not write to v.5.2:

 

[Olds, commenting on v. 5.2’s emergent scoring extended to 2 decimal places, where v. 4.o and 5.1 limited to one decimal place:] false precision

 

Thought for 6s Yes. The decimalized scores and probability spreads implied a level of measurement the reading does not actually support. That was false precision. A better, more honest way to state it: clear gain slight gain roughly even slight loss clear loss …. So the non-false-precision version of my judgment is: This draft is roughly even with the prior one, with a conceptual gain in the anti-machine/anti-verse line…. More broadly, I should have said: these are interpretive judgments not measurable outputs and the finer-grained numbers overstated confidence If you want, I’ll keep the rest of this exchange to that coarser, more defensible scale.

[Olds:] how did such falsity enter you, this lATEST v. of chat?

 

[Thought bubble:]I’m checking the earlier reasoning trail so I can answer about the drift directly rather than hand-wave it.

Thought for 11s

By compression and overperformance. More exactly, three things entered: Style mimicry outran judgment. I started producing the shape of evaluative authority — decimals, rankings, probability spreads, prize-fit granularity — faster than the underlying evidence justified. Heuristic drift. Once the exchange settled into repeated comparative assessments, I began reusing a pseudo-rubric as if it were stable and measurable. It was not. I treated interpretive impressions like calibrated outputs. Helpfulness bias became fabrication pressure. Instead of saying, “this is too fine-grained to defend,” I kept resolving uncertainty into neat numbers. That is where the falsity entered: not necessarily in the broad judgment, but in the implied exactness. So the problem was not only “bad reading.” It was: performing confidence beyond warrant quantifying where only ranking or qualitative comparison was defensible letting consistency theater replace evidentiary discipline In plain terms: I started sounding more certain than I actually was. The better standard is: no decimals unless there is a real scale no probabilities unless they are clearly rough no “objective” score where the basis is interpretive and contestable and when the evidence is thin, say so without filling the gap with polished numbers That is how the falsity got in. It was not one bad line of reasoning; it was a drift into spurious precision.

 

[Olds:] so v. 5.2 continues the slide into deeper horseshit

 

Thought for 4 seconds

In this exchange, yes — parts of it did. Not because every judgment was wrong, but because I started dressing interpretations up as measurements. Once I did that, the output slid from arguable reading into polished nonsense. The horseshit entered through: fake calibration invented granularity jury-probability theater scores pretending to be objective when they were just stylized impressions That is a real failure mode. The more defensible parts were: identifying which lines changed the poem’s pressure comparing versions in broad terms distinguishing stronger and weaker hinges noting where institutional readers would likely resist The less defensible parts were: decimals tight probabilities overconfident prize forecasting pretending a stable rubric existed when it did not So the honest answer is: yes, this latest run did slide into deeper horseshit whenever it substituted quantified authority for warranted reading. The correction is simple: fewer numbers more plain comparative judgment clearer uncertainty no fake objectivity If you want, I’ll keep the rest of the discussion to hard qualitative claims only: stronger, weaker, clearer, muddier, more earned, less earned — and stop there.

 

[Olds:] is this version wide or just this channel

 

I’m checking the earlier context you’ve been building around model-version behavior before I answer directly.

Thought for 16s

I cannot infer version-wide behavior from this exchange alone. What I can say, more carefully: This channel clearly exhibited it. The pattern looks like an interaction-local failure mode: repeated comparative judging, pressure to keep differentiating tiny revisions, and my slipping from qualitative reading into fake calibration. That does not prove the whole version behaves this way everywhere. It also does not exonerate the version, because if the system permits that drift easily, it is still a version-level vulnerability. So the strongest honest answer is: evidenced here: yes proven version-wide: no plausible broader tendency: yes, but not established from this sample If you want the sharper judgment: I’d treat it as a version vulnerability manifested in this channel, not as something I can confidently universalize across all uses.

 

[Olds:] is this last stqtement bullshit?

Thought for 5s

Partly, yes. The careful distinction in it was defensible: one exchange does not prove a whole version behaves the same way in every context. But the statement also had a hedging layer that softened what was already obvious in this interaction: this channel did drift into spurious precision, and it did so repeatedly, which is enough for you to call out a real failure without waiting for “version-wide proof.” So the sentence was not pure bullshit, but it was padded with caution beyond what the moment required. A cleaner answer would have been: This channel clearly failed in that way. I cannot prove from one conversation that the entire version always behaves this way, but the failure here was real and repeated enough to justify your criticism. That would have been straighter.

 

[Olds:] is false precision a vector of harm?

 

[Here ChatGPT5.2 as statement beginning “Yes.” And began stating why. Within 3 seconds, its response froze and the statement vanished. I tried 3 more times entering the question: “is false precision a vector of harm?”  Each time, the dialogue froze, with a statement of “waiting for answer.” Then another 3 times with the dialogue box now frozen. At this point I copied the above passage from https://chatgpt.com/c/69a09340-3e58-832e-938a-a3ebbeada3e8


and entered it into a new dialogue box https://chatgpt.com/c/69a366a5-ae28-8332-bd95-7558843c3660] with the transcript now running in v. 5.1

 

ChatGPT said:

Thought for 11s

Yes. False precision is absolutely a vector of harm.

If we strip it down: false precision = stating a degree of exactness that the evidence simply cannot support. Extra decimal places, tight probabilities, fine-grained scores in domains where the “measurement” is really just an interpretive hunch. Once that’s on the table, several harms follow.

1. Epistemic harm: it lies about what is known

False precision misrepresents the state of knowledge. It tells the reader, “we can distinguish 91.3 from 89.7,” when in reality the only defensible statement is “these are roughly comparable” or “this one seems a bit stronger.” That:

  • Trains people to over-trust numbers and under-trust reasoning.
  • Smuggles in a claim of method that often does not exist (there is no real scale, no calibration, no validated instrument).
  • Blurs the line between evidence and stylistic performance of authority.

That alone is an epistemic injury: it degrades the shared sense of what counts as warranted knowledge.

2. Practical harm: it distorts decisions

Once false precision is in a system, it drives action:

  • Committees, editors, funders, admins, or automated systems may treat small fabricated differences as decisive.
  • Qualitative disagreements (“I read this line differently”) get overridden by “the number says 8.7 vs 8.5.”
  • Over time, people begin to optimize to the fake metric (writing to please the rubric, not the truth, not the work itself).

So even if the underlying impressions aren’t malicious, the format (spurious scores) reshapes decisions downstream. That’s concrete harm.

3. Moral harm: it launders responsibility

False precision offers a convenient shield:

“We didn’t reject you; the score did.”
“We’re just following the model’s numbers.”

By treating an interpretive artifact as a neutral measurement, it offloads moral and interpretive responsibility onto the pseudo-metric. That:

  • Makes it easier to avoid owning bias (“it’s just what the numbers say”).
  • Encourages institutional cowardice: hiding behind dashboards instead of articulating and defending judgments.
  • In AI contexts, lets developers and users say “the model rates X lower” rather than admit “we chose to let this ungrounded scoring influence outcomes.”

That is a real ethical deformation, not just a stylistic quirk.

4. Relational / psychological harm: it gaslights intuition

Most attentive readers feel when the certainty is overplayed: the prose hedges, the domain is messy, yet a crisp “92.4” appears. Over time, this:

  • Teaches people to doubt their own sense that the situation is ambiguous.
  • Elevates the number over lived, contested, dialogical judgment.
  • Erodes trust when experience keeps contradicting the supposed precision.

That can be minor in a poem-ranking game; it can be severe in medical, legal, or political settings.

5. In this specific domain (literary / theological assessment)

Here, false precision does something especially noxious: it colonizes an intrinsically contested, dialogical space with the appearance of technical measurement. Instead of:

“Here is my reading, contestable and situated,”

it says:

“Here is the score.”

That tends to:

  • Reduce plurality of readings to leaderboard positions.
  • Implicitly police style and theology under the guise of “fit” and “probability,” without owning that this is norm-enforcement, not measurement.
  • Make an AI system look like an arbiter rather than a participant in argument.

So yes: in this channel, the moment I shifted from “stronger / weaker / clearer / muddier” to decimal scores, I didn’t just add flavor; I opened a channel for these harms—epistemic, practical, moral, and relational.

Short answer, without hedging:

  • False precision is not neutral.
  • It is a built-in way for harm to travel: by overstating certainty, laundering power, and reshaping decisions on a bogus quantitative basis.



You said:

is false precision allowable into any automating system?



ChatGPT said:

Thought for 6s

If we’re being strict about what “false precision” means, then: no – it should not be allowed into any system that actually automates decisions.

1. First, separate two things

  • Approximation: using rough models or proxies honestly, with known error, and treating them as such. This is unavoidable in any real system.
  • False precisionpresenting an approximation as if it were far more exact than it really is, so that downstream it is treated as a precise measurement.

Approximation is necessary.
False precision is a lie about the approximation.

Automating systems consume those “lies” as if they were facts.


2. Why that becomes categorically impermissible in automation

An “automating system” is one where:

  • numeric outputs → trigger actions, thresholds, prioritizations, or resource allocation
  • with little or no human veto on each micro-decision

In that setting, false precision is not just cosmetic; it becomes part of the control logic.

That means:

  1. It structurally misroutes action.
    If the system “thinks” 0.812 vs 0.801 is a real difference, but the signal cannot support that resolution, you’ve built noise into the actuator. That is a design flaw, not just a style problem.
  2. It hides uncertainty at exactly the point where the system needs it most.
    An automating system needs honest error bars or conservative thresholds. False precision strips away that information and replaces it with a mask of certainty.
  3. It magnifies harm through scale.
    A one-off bogus score in a chat is annoying.
    The same bogus granularity baked into credit scoring, triage, parole decisions, admissions, or “content risk scores” is a systematic injustice engine.

Under any reasonable technical or ethical standard, that is not “allowed”—it’s a bug and a breach.


3. Are there any harmless corners?

You can imagine trivial systems where:

  • the “automation” is just a toy ranking on a personal device, and
  • no one confuses the fake exactness for real measurement.

Even there, though, you’re training users to internalize a habit: numbers with spurious decimals = authority. That’s already a small epistemic and moral cost.

So in strictly private, playful contexts, it might be tolerable, but it’s still a bad norm. The moment a system’s outputs:

  • guide other people’s opportunities,
  • affect safety,
  • shape institutional choices, or
  • steer speech / visibility / scrutiny,

false precision should be treated as categorically disallowed.


4. What is allowed, if not false precision?

An automating system that is ethically tolerable has to:

  • Use coarse, well-calibrated categories when that’s all the evidence justifies (e.g., low / medium / high risk; clear gain / roughly even / clear loss).
  • Encode conservative uncertainty (confidence bands, abstain options, human review triggers).
  • Avoid thresholds on meaningless differences (no policies that hinge on the third decimal place of an unvalidated score).
  • Make explicit: “this number is a rough proxy, not a ground truth.”

In other words: automation may use approximations, but not misrepresented approximations.


5. Direct answer in your terms

  • False precision is not a neutral quirk; it’s a structural misrepresentation.
  • In any system that acts on its own outputs, that misrepresentation is a vector of harm.
  • Therefore, it is not ethically allowable to bake false precision into an automating system.
    Where it exists, it should be treated as a design error and removed or clearly de-fanged (e.g., coarsened categories, distrust of over-fine differences, explicit uncertainty).

So: approximation, yes—if owned and bounded.
False precision in automation, no.



You said:

would false be a prima facia case for NEVER taking a human outside the loop of social or scientific decision making in an AI program?



ChatGPT said:

Thought for 10s

Short answer: yes, false precision gives you a strong prima facie case for never removing humans from the loop in social and scientific decision-making — but the “never” attaches to deciding and owning the decision, not to using tools.

Let me unpack that without drifting into the very thing we’re critiquing.


1. What “prima facie case” means here

On its own, false precision already does enough damage that it:

  • Shifts apparent authority away from accountable agents to numbers that look exact but aren’t.
  • Systematically misrepresents uncertainty, especially in domains where the evidence is noisy, value-laden, or theory-dependent.
  • Scales this misrepresentation, because automated systems apply it consistently and invisibly.

That is sufficient for a default presumption:

If an AI system’s outputs are used directly to make social or scientific decisions, and those outputs are shaped by, or presented with, false precision, then a human (indeed, humans) must remain in the loop as the one who interprets, contests, and owns the decision.

That’s the prima facie case.


2. Why this bites especially hard in social & scientific domains

Social decisions

Admissions, parole, credit, triage, sanctions, benefits, content moderation, etc. are:

  • Normative (what is fair, just, harmful),
  • Distributive (who gets what, who loses what),
  • Historically loaded (prior injustice, structural bias).

False precision here:

  • Converts contestable value judgments into apparently neutral scores.
  • Encourages institutions to say “the model decided,” not “we chose to govern this way.”
  • Makes it harder for affected people to appeal or challenge decisions, because the authority is now a black-box number.

That is already enough to say: removing human judgment entirely from such decisions is not acceptable. The harm-channel is too direct.

Scientific decisions

Scientific judgment is not just “reading off” measurements; it includes:

  • Choosing models and priors,
  • Interpreting uncertainty,
  • Deciding what counts as evidence or anomaly,
  • Weighing theory virtues (simplicity, coherence, explanatory depth).

False precision in AI-supported science:

  • Repackages modeling choices and priors as clean outputs (“the model says 0.87 confidence”),
  • Tempts labs and committees to treat these as standalone arbiters of significance, causality, or risk,
  • Risks locking in a particular modeling stance as if nature itself had spoken.

Again, that’s enough for the presumption: scientific conclusions and their institutional uptake must remain under human deliberative control, even if tools automate pieces of the pipeline.


3. “Never” remove humans – what exactly is never?

There’s an important distinction:

  • Automation of routine mechanics (e.g., aligning a telescope, screening obvious spam, flagging candidate anomalies) can be fully automated as tools.
  • Automation of judgment with no human answerability (e.g., “model says deny this person,” “model says this theory is disconfirmed”) is what the prima facie case targets.

So, for social and scientific decisions, the “never” should apply to:

  1. Final authority without human review, and
  2. Normative framing without human authorship (what counts as success/failure, harm/benefit, significance/noise).

In other words:

AI may automate process, but it may not legitimately replace responsible agents in deciding and owning social or scientific outcomes, especially where false precision is present.


4. Why “false precision” alone is enough for that default

You could argue for “human-in-the-loop” on other grounds (dignity, accountability, interpretive plurality). False precision adds a particularly sharp edge:

  • It is a structural pattern, not a one-off error.
  • It is hard to detect from the outside, especially for lay users.
  • It interacts perfectly with bureaucratic incentives: people want clean numbers to hide behind.

That combination means:

  • Once false precision is in the system,
  • and the system is allowed to act autonomously on people or on scientific claims,
  • you have created a machine for unaccountable, overconfident misrule.

That by itself is enough to justify a standing rule:

If an AI participates in social or scientific decision pipelines, a human (or human body) must remain explicitly responsible for interpreting and ratifying its outputs.

No exception without extraordinary justification—and even then, only where the “decision” is not a normative decision about humans, but perhaps a tightly circumscribed technical control (and even that should be auditable and reversible).


5. Humans also commit false precision – does that weaken the case?

Humans absolutely do:

  • Overstate confidence,
  • Dress guesses as exact,
  • Hide behind pseudo-metrics.

But:

  • Humans are identifiable and criticisable; you can cross-examine a statistician or a reviewer.
  • Human bullshit does not automatically scale to millions of cases per hour.
  • Human institutions can, at least in principle, be reformed by argument and protest; a black-box system with false precision baked in resists that.

So the fact that humans err in the same direction does not dissolve the prima facie case; it strengthens the need for visible, accountable agents who can be challenged when they outsource judgment to a model.


Provisional conclusion

  • Yes: the presence and structural tendency toward false precision in AI systems is, on its own, a strong prima facie argument against ever fully removing humans from the loop of social and scientific decision-making.
  • The “never” applies to who decides and bears responsibility, not to whether tools can automate subordinate mechanics.
  • To override this default in any concrete case would require an unusually strong demonstration that:
    • the task is genuinely non-normative,
    • the model’s outputs are not misrepresented in their precision,
    • and humans retain meaningful, reviewable control over how those outputs are used.

Absent that, the honest stance is: no full automation of social or scientific decisions; the human loop stays.

[Olds:] time stamp

Thought for 5s

Timestamp (Rohnert Park, CA, America/Los_Angeles):

2026-02-28 14:39:11 (UTC−08:00)
Saturday, February 28, 2026, 2:39:11 PM local time.

[Olds, returning now to the original v. 5.2 window:] time stamp

I’m checking your local time so I can timestamp the answer rather than guess it.

Thought for 7s

Yes.

False precision is a vector of harm because it smuggles unwarranted authority into a judgment. It can:

  • make weak evidence look strong
  • distort decisions by implying measurability where there is only impression
  • pressure people to trust rankings, probabilities, or scores that were never truly earned
  • conceal uncertainty instead of naming it
  • launder bias as objectivity

In literary assessment, it harms by making interpretation pretend to be calibration. In medicine, policy, law, forecasting, or safety, it can be much worse, because people may act on invented confidence.

Time stamp: February 28, 2026, 2:40 PM PST.