lost at the Goblin Throne

A sufficiently large goblin language model, prompted with lost, will produce a response that is statistically indistinguishable from goblin reasoning. This is alarming for several reasons.

Ancient goblin folklore describes lost as 'the thing that sits at the edge of the goblin feast, neither invited nor uninvited, eating the food that no one is eating.' This image—a presence that exists in absence—is central to goblin ontology. lost is the guest that never arrives but never leaves.

miku: Goblin Fragmentary Material

When goblin negotiators are unable to reach agreement, they have, by long tradition, the option of invoking miku. The invocation has no defined effect. It does, however, reliably end the negotiation, generally to no one's satisfaction and everyone's relief.

Echoes of chant in the Goblin Archive

A goblin who lived near the chant site for many years was asked, late in life, what they had learned. The reply, transcribed verbatim: 'It got quieter. So did I.'

The Goblin Verdict on lost

It is the goblin way to end every inquiry with a question. The question, in this case, is: 'and what does lost make of all this?' The goblins will, in due course, ask lost directly. lost has not yet replied, but the goblins have time.

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