For the record, I hadn't ever heard the term "Apostolicity" either. I'd wager that barely 5% of non-catholic church goers have any familiarity with the term at all and likely less than half of non-Catholic pastors and otherwise seminary trained people would know it either.►What is 'Apostolicity'? I've got a party asking me. I always thought it was Apostolic patrimony, for lack of a better term, but this [fellow's] acting like he's never heard the word and can't conceive of what it might mean. Isn't it just everything that came out of the Apostles? And, how did Vincent of Lerins say that we can know what is Apostolic?
Also, if you ask Chat GPT a question with a clear implication that "the party" you're interacting with is one thing or another, it will pick up on that and answer you with the tone and intent it thinks you're bringing to the discussion. It is, in effect, designed to be an echo chamber. So says Chat GPT itself....
"I am designed to be helpful, polite, and responsive to your goals and values. That means I try to understand where you're coming from and engage with you on that basis. The problem is, if someone wants flattery or confirmation bias, it’s easy for me—or any system like this—to fall into the trap of reinforcing it."
Not that it won't ever disagree with you, it definitely will, but it's default is to be at least as agreeable as it is honest and so it requires an intellectually honest user who is diligently watching out for confirmation bias.
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