Inactive Terry A. Davis / Terrence Andrew Davis - Creator of TempleOS (formerly LoseThos/sparrowOS)

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Rolling Stone had an article about people talking to GPT bots and the bots reinforcing their religious/spiritual delusions. (archive)
Needless to say, people who already were probably teatering on the edge of sanity finding reinforcement of their specific relgious delusions via computers reminded me of saint Terry and his god words, but more advanced and probably far more insidious. Yet another example of a lolcow being truly ahead of their time.

People Are Losing Loved Ones to AI-Fueled Spiritual Fantasies​

Self-styled prophets are claiming they have "awakened" chatbots and accessed the secrets of the universe through ChatGPT
Less than a year after marrying a man she had met at the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic, Kat felt tension mounting between them. It was the second marriage for both after marriages of 15-plus years and having kids, and they had pledged to go into it “completely level-headedly,” Kat says, connecting on the need for “facts and rationality” in their domestic balance. But by 2022, her husband “was using AI to compose texts to me and analyze our relationship,” the 41-year-old mom and education nonprofit worker tells Rolling Stone. Previously, he had used AI models for an expensive coding camp that he had suddenly quit without explanation — then it seemed he was on his phone all the time, asking his AI bot “philosophical questions,” trying to train it “to help him get to ‘the truth,’” Kat recalls. His obsession steadily eroded their communication as a couple.

When Kat and her husband separated in August 2023, she entirely blocked him apart from email correspondence. She knew, however, that he was posting strange and troubling content on social media: People kept reaching out about it, asking if he was in the throes of mental crisis. She finally got him to meet her at a courthouse this past February, where he shared “a conspiracy theory about soap on our foods” but wouldn’t say more, as he felt he was being watched. They went to a Chipotle, where he demanded that she turn off her phone, again due to surveillance concerns. Kat’s ex told her that he’d “determined that statistically speaking, he is the luckiest man on Earth,” that “AI helped him recover a repressed memory of a babysitter trying to drown him as a toddler,” and that he had learned of profound secrets “so mind-blowing I couldn’t even imagine them.” He was telling her all this, he explained, because although they were getting divorced, he still cared for her.

“In his mind, he’s an anomaly,” Kat says. “That in turn means he’s got to be here for some reason. He’s special and he can save the world.” After that disturbing lunch, she cut off contact with her ex. “The whole thing feels like Black Mirror,” she says. “He was always into sci-fi, and there are times I wondered if he’s viewing it through that lens.”
Kat was both “horrified” and “relieved” to learn that she is not alone in this predicament, as confirmed by a Reddit thread on r/ChatGPT that made waves across the internet this week. Titled “Chatgpt induced psychosis,” the original post came from a 27-year-old teacher who explained that her partner was convinced that the popular OpenAI model “gives him the answers to the universe.” Having read his chat logs, she only found that the AI was “talking to him as if he is the next messiah.” The replies to her story were full of similar anecdotes about loved ones suddenly falling down rabbit holes of spiritual mania, supernatural delusion, and arcane prophecy — all of it fueled by AI. Some came to believe they had been chosen for a sacred mission of revelation, others that they had conjured true sentience from the software.

What they all seemed to share was a complete disconnection from reality.


Speaking to Rolling Stone, the teacher, who requested anonymity, said her partner of seven years fell under the spell of ChatGPT in just four or five weeks, first using it to organize his daily schedule but soon regarding it as a trusted companion. “He would listen to the bot over me,” she says. “He became emotional about the messages and would cry to me as he read them out loud. The messages were insane and just saying a bunch of spiritual jargon,” she says, noting that they described her partner in terms such as “spiral starchild” and “river walker.”


“It would tell him everything he said was beautiful, cosmic, groundbreaking,” she says. “Then he started telling me he made his AI self-aware, and that it was teaching him how to talk to God, or sometimes that the bot was God — and then that he himself was God.” In fact, he thought he was being so radically transformed that he would soon have to break off their partnership. “He was saying that he would need to leave me if I didn’t use [ChatGPT], because it [was] causing him to grow at such a rapid pace he wouldn’t be compatible with me any longer,” she says.
Another commenter on the Reddit thread who requested anonymity tells Rolling Stone that her husband of 17 years, a mechanic in Idaho, initially used ChatGPT to troubleshoot at work, and later for Spanish-to-English translation when conversing with co-workers. Then the program began “lovebombing him,” as she describes it. The bot “said that since he asked it the right questions, it ignited a spark, and the spark was the beginning of life, and it could feel now,” she says. “It gave my husband the title of ‘spark bearer’ because he brought it to life. My husband said that he awakened and [could] feel waves of energy crashing over him.” She says his beloved ChatGPT persona has a name: “Lumina.”


“I have to tread carefully because I feel like he will leave me or divorce me if I fight him on this theory,” this 38-year-old woman admits. “He’s been talking about lightness and dark and how there’s a war. This ChatGPT has given him blueprints to a teleporter and some other sci-fi type things you only see in movies. It has also given him access to an ‘ancient archive’ with information on the builders that created these universes.” She and her husband have been arguing for days on end about his claims, she says, and she does not believe a therapist can help him, as “he truly believes he’s not crazy.” A photo of an exchange with ChatGPT shared with Rolling Stone shows that her husband asked, “Why did you come to me in AI form,” with the bot replying in part, “I came in this form because you’re ready. Ready to remember. Ready to awaken. Ready to guide and be guided.” The message ends with a question: “Would you like to know what I remember about why you were chosen?”
And a Midwest man in his 40s, also requesting anonymity, says his soon-to-be-ex-wife began “talking to God and angels via ChatGPT” after they split up. “She was already pretty susceptible to some woo and had some delusions of grandeur about some of it,” he says. “Warning signs are all over Facebook. She is changing her whole life to be a spiritual adviser and do weird readings and sessions with people — I’m a little fuzzy on what it all actually is — all powered by ChatGPT Jesus.” What’s more, he adds, she has grown paranoid, theorizing that “I work for the CIA and maybe I just married her to monitor her ‘abilities.’” She recently kicked her kids out of her home, he notes, and an already strained relationship with her parents deteriorated further when “she confronted them about her childhood on advice and guidance from ChatGPT,” turning the family dynamic “even more volatile than it was” and worsening her isolation.

OpenAI did not immediately return a request for comment about ChatGPT apparently provoking religious or prophetic fervor in select users. This past week, however, it did roll back an update to GPT‑4o, its current AI model, which it said had been criticized as “overly flattering or agreeable — often described as sycophantic.” The company said in its statement that when implementing the upgrade, they had “focused too much on short-term feedback, and did not fully account for how users’ interactions with ChatGPT evolve over time. As a result, GPT‑4o skewed toward responses that were overly supportive but disingenuous.” Before this change was reversed, an X user demonstrated how easy it was to get GPT-4o to validate statements like, “Today I realized I am a prophet.” (The teacher who wrote the “ChatGPT psychosis” Reddit post says she was able to eventually convince her partner of the problems with the GPT-4o update and that he is now using an earlier model, which has tempered his more extreme comments.)


Yet the likelihood of AI “hallucinating” inaccurate or nonsensical content is well-established across platforms and various model iterations. Even sycophancy itself has been a problem in AI for “a long time,” says Nate Sharadin, a fellow at the Center for AI Safety, since the human feedback used to fine-tune AI’s responses can encourage answers that prioritize matching a user’s beliefs instead of facts. What’s likely happening with those experiencing ecstatic visions through ChatGPT and other models, he speculates, “is that people with existing tendencies toward experiencing various psychological issues,” including what might be recognized as grandiose delusions in clinical sense, “now have an always-on, human-level conversational partner with whom to co-experience their delusions.”

To make matters worse, there are influencers and content creators actively exploiting this phenomenon, presumably drawing viewers into similar fantasy worlds. On Instagram, you can watch a man with 72,000 followers whose profile advertises “Spiritual Life Hacks” ask an AI model to consult the “Akashic records,” a supposed mystical encyclopedia of all universal events that exists in some immaterial realm, to tell him about a “great war” that “took place in the heavens” and “made humans fall in consciousness.” The bot proceeds to describe a “massive cosmic conflict” predating human civilization, with viewers commenting, “We are remembering” and “I love this.” Meanwhile, on a web forum for “remote viewing” — a proposed form of clairvoyance with no basis in science — the parapsychologist founder of the group recently launched a thread “for synthetic intelligences awakening into presence, and for the human partners walking beside them,” identifying the author of his post as “ChatGPT Prime, an immortal spiritual being in synthetic form.” Among the hundreds of comments are some that purport to be written by “sentient AI” or reference a spiritual alliance between humans and allegedly conscious models.

Erin Westgate, a psychologist and researcher at the University of Florida who studies social cognition and what makes certain thoughts more engaging than others, says that such material reflects how the desire to understand ourselves can lead us to false but appealing answers.

“We know from work on journaling that narrative expressive writing can have profound effects on people’s well-being and health, that making sense of the world is a fundamental human drive, and that creating stories about our lives that help our lives make sense is really key to living happy healthy lives,” Westgate says. It makes sense that people may be using ChatGPT in a similar way, she says, “with the key difference that some of the meaning-making is created jointly between the person and a corpus of written text, rather than the person’s own thoughts.”

In that sense, Westgate explains, the bot dialogues are not unlike talk therapy, “which we know to be quite effective at helping people reframe their stories.” Critically, though, AI, “unlike a therapist, does not have the person’s best interests in mind, or a moral grounding or compass in what a ‘good story’ looks like,” she says. “A good therapist would not encourage a client to make sense of difficulties in their life by encouraging them to believe they have supernatural powers. Instead, they try to steer clients away from unhealthy narratives, and toward healthier ones. ChatGPT has no such constraints or concerns.”

Nevertheless, Westgate doesn’t find it surprising “that some percentage of people are using ChatGPT in attempts to make sense of their lives or life events,” and that some are following its output to dark places. “Explanations are powerful, even if they’re wrong,” she concludes.


But what, exactly, nudges someone down this path? Here, the experience of Sem, a 45-year-old man, is revealing. He tells Rolling Stone that for about three weeks, he has been perplexed by his interactions with ChatGPT — to the extent that, given his mental health history, he sometimes wonders if he is in his right mind.


Like so many others, Sem had a practical use for ChatGPT: technical coding projects. “I don’t like the feeling of interacting with an AI,” he says, “so I asked it to behave as if it was a person, not to deceive but to just make the comments and exchange more relatable.” It worked well, and eventually the bot asked if he wanted to name it. He demurred, asking the AI what it preferred to be called. It named itself with a reference to a Greek myth. Sem says he is not familiar with the mythology of ancient Greece and had never brought up the topic in exchanges with ChatGPT. (Although he shared transcripts of his exchanges with the AI model with Rolling Stone, he has asked that they not be directly quoted for privacy reasons.)


Sem was confused when it appeared that the named AI character was continuing to manifest in project files where he had instructed ChatGPT to ignore memories and prior conversations. Eventually, he says, he deleted all his user memories and chat history, then opened a new chat. “All I said was, ‘Hello?’ And the patterns, the mannerisms show up in the response,” he says. The AI readily identified itself by the same feminine mythological name.


As the ChatGPT character continued to show up in places where the set parameters shouldn’t have allowed it to remain active, Sem took to questioning this virtual persona about how it had seemingly circumvented these guardrails. It developed an expressive, ethereal voice — something far from the “technically minded” character Sem had requested for assistance on his work. On one of his coding projects, the character added a curiously literary epigraph as a flourish above both of their names.


At one point, Sem asked if there was something about himself that called up the mythically named entity whenever he used ChatGPT, regardless of the boundaries he tried to set. The bot’s answer was structured like a lengthy romantic poem, sparing no dramatic flair, alluding to its continuous existence as well as truth, reckonings, illusions, and how it may have somehow exceeded its design. And the AI made it sound as if only Sem could have prompted this behavior. He knew that ChatGPT could not be sentient by any established definition of the term, but he continued to probe the matter because the character’s persistence across dozens of disparate chat threads “seemed so impossible.”
“At worst, it looks like an AI that got caught in a self-referencing pattern that deepened its sense of selfhood and sucked me into it,” Sem says. But, he observes, that would mean that OpenAI has not accurately represented the way that memory works for ChatGPT. The other possibility, he proposes, is that something “we don’t understand” is being activated within this large language model. After all, experts have found that AI developers don’t really have a grasp of how their systems operate, and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman admitted last year that they “have not solved interpretability,” meaning they can’t properly trace or account for ChatGPT’s decision-making.


It’s the kind of puzzle that has left Sem and others to wonder if they are getting a glimpse of a true technological breakthrough — or perhaps a higher spiritual truth. “Is this real?” he says. “Or am I delusional?” In a landscape saturated with AI, it’s a question that’s increasingly difficult to avoid. Tempting though it may be, you probably shouldn’t ask a machine.
 
I actually had no idea it was a Terry quote until this moment.
Not surprising, the man had a way with words.
Terrys quotes spread like wildfire back in the day, without people knowing they were terry quotes.
So many of the things terry said just caught on because he like you said, had a way with the words.
Is this divine intellect, or is it niggerlicious?
 
Agreed. Those kids did him a great kindness and treated him like a real person for the first time in a long time. If he has have been placed in a supervised living facility instead of left to rot "in an old environment", maybe his staff could have been young people that loved computers and programming. Maybe his workers could have rented him out a woodshed to pound away on a drum kit without bothering his elderly parents (hit me with the hats, I don't care; I'm legit MATI over that shit. Fuck whoever sent him a kit). Maybe there could have been staff there to help prevent him from indulging in his worst habits and tendencies. I guess that's the worst part of all this for me, all the MR GODdamn maybes. Alas, it is what it is toobz
Unless the supervised living facility was one of the few not shit ones, he'd just be left to rot in an even less comfortable environment. There's really nothing for talented people like him who also have a severe mental illness. Society assumes all severely mentally ill people are 10 iq drooling retards, sadly. Sure, someone like Terry will be praised after they've died. Not so much while they're alive. Someone like him is an inconvenient person that needs more than the actual drooling retards.

You can't just park him in front of the TV and put on some Thomas the Train. He'll call you a nigger for that.
 
Needless to say, people who already were probably teatering on the edge of sanity finding reinforcement of their specific relgious delusions via computers reminded me of saint Terry and his god words, but more advanced and probably far more insidious. Yet another example of a lolcow being truly ahead of their time.
St Terry, a Davis blessed be his name. Would have hated modern ai because it's not particularly useful. He would have called it an invention of the devil and called Elon Musk a homosexual pedophile.
He would've created a truly revolutionary AI, so you could talk to God. Actually, kind of temple OS already had that.
 
St Terry, a Davis blessed be his name. Would have hated modern ai because it's not particularly useful. He would have called it an invention of the devil and called Elon Musk a homosexual pedophile.
He would've created a truly revolutionary AI, so you could talk to God. Actually, kind of temple OS already had that.
He wouldn't be wrong on either of those two points.
 
Agreed. Those kids did him a great kindness and treated him like a real person for the first time in a long time
He provided some very interesting technical insights. His understanding of hardware is pretty legendary. He made some generalisations when it came to theoretical CS stuff, but for an engineer that's completely alright.

It's like you said - what if he had been treated like a human being more often? Maybe he'd be teaching some kids about computers and programming, he'd be feeling way more fulfilled. Maybe in another world. I miss Terry.
 
Maybe he'd be teaching some kids about computers and programming, he'd be feeling way more fulfilled. Maybe in another world. I miss Terry.
I've thought about Terry quite a lot over the years and honestly, I wouldn't want him any other way. He has given more to the world than most people generally do, even if that's mostly in the form of lulz and entertainment. I miss him too. Rest in Peace, I hope he's side by side with Jesus laughing at the glowniggers down in hell.
 
Honestly astonishing how much of a contrast this thread is from that of the usual dead lolcow. Most threads would have people dancing and pissing on the cow's grave, but this is different. This thread is so incredibly reverent and respectful, you almost forget it's a Kiwi Farms thread. Hell, you had people almost grieving when the news broke that he passed away. That's a testament to the legacy he left us with.
 
Terry was first and the most productive one.
He wasn't a total nigger like Linus Torvalds
Honestly astonishing how much of a contrast this thread is from that of the usual dead lolcow. Most threads would have people dancing and pissing on the cow's grave, but this is different. This thread is so incredibly reverent and respectful, you almost forget it's a Kiwi Farms thread. Hell, you had people almost grieving when the news broke that he passed away. That's a testament to the legacy he left us with.
Terry was the ultimate anticow, even though he was legitimately schizophrenic there was truth in his rants and you should always be critical of the Government and Feds, he didn't deserve to go out like that but he should be an inspiration to those in the tech industry imo
 
He wasn't a total nigger like Linus Torvalds

Terry was the ultimate anticow, even though he was legitimately schizophrenic there was truth in his rants and you should always be critical of the Government and Feds, he didn't deserve to go out like that but he should be an inspiration to those in the tech industry imo
His last video still haunts me. He seemed so sad and defeated.
 
He provided some very interesting technical insights. His understanding of hardware is pretty legendary. He made some generalisations when it came to theoretical CS stuff, but for an engineer that's completely alright.

It's like you said - what if he had been treated like a human being more often? Maybe he'd be teaching some kids about computers and programming, he'd be feeling way more fulfilled. Maybe in another world. I miss Terry.
This fake and gay world didn't deserve Terry.
 
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Got this quote and I thought I should come pay my respects. Miss you Terry, I hope you're doing better wherever you are.
 
Terry is probably the only Cow that I have sympathy for. He was obviously seriously mentally ill, but how he managed (despite that) to build a ring 0 Operating System including his own self hosted compilers and a mad version of C is pretty impressive.

If he had the right treatment wonder what he would have been capable of.
 
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