Math: Large Language Models Can Replace that Once-Revered Expertise
The knock used to be put on lawyers: They went to law school because they lacked the math ability to go get the M.B.A. We used to laugh and wonder how SCOTUS' John Roberts, Kirkland & Ellis CEO Jeffrey Hammes and Paul, Weiss Chair Brad Karp did in calculus class. Did they even dare take the GMAT with its demanding math portion?
However, lawyers might duck the threat of job elimination from large language models longer than those whose living depends on math talent. That's according to venture capitalist Peter Thiel, interviewed by Business Insider.
Thiel predicts that within about three to five years LLMs can solve much of the problems involving math. Along with the jobs would go the status of that expertise.
Watchers of the legal sector predict the big hits to jobs won't come for about 10 years. That gives the legal community plenty of time to protect itself through regulation and precedents from cases.
Recall that it was Thiel who trashed the idea of going to college and provided funding to those who opted to start a business versus going to college. He was on the right track. More Gen Zers are opting to treat high school as the terminal degree and going to work, mostly in the trades. So, Thiel might also be right about the decline of the demand for human math experts.
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