Calling out a small typo, as this is clearly meant as a persuasive reference point:”On* our view, the international community’s top immediate priority should be creating an “off switch” for frontier AI development”Presumably, “On” here should be “In”
You come across “on this view” in philosophy writing – (as a native English speaker) I also hadn’t heard it until a few years ago but it is legit!
https://ell.stackexchange.com/questions/61365/correctness-of-on-this-view
Both are valid options but they have slightly different meanings.
“On our view” treats the viewpoint as a foundation for the policy recommendation that follows, while “in our view” would present it more as the authors’ subjective perspective.
Nah, ‘on’ also works. Different image. On here invoking ‘standing on’ or ‘relying on’; similar to ‘on that assumption’ or ‘on those grounds’.
Thanks though!
As a native English speaker, that seems pretty unnatural to me. But your choice of course!
I think it’s a feature of the local dialect. I’ve seen it multiple times around here and never outside.
Calling out a small typo, as this is clearly meant as a persuasive reference point:
”On* our view, the international community’s top immediate priority should be creating an “off switch” for frontier AI development”
Presumably, “On” here should be “In”
You come across “on this view” in philosophy writing – (as a native English speaker) I also hadn’t heard it until a few years ago but it is legit!
https://ell.stackexchange.com/questions/61365/correctness-of-on-this-view
Both are valid options but they have slightly different meanings.
“On our view” treats the viewpoint as a foundation for the policy recommendation that follows, while “in our view” would present it more as the authors’ subjective perspective.
Nah, ‘on’ also works. Different image. On here invoking ‘standing on’ or ‘relying on’; similar to ‘on that assumption’ or ‘on those grounds’.
Thanks though!
As a native English speaker, that seems pretty unnatural to me. But your choice of course!
I think it’s a feature of the local dialect. I’ve seen it multiple times around here and never outside.