Interesting. Do you really think that?
My initial assumption would be that there are a lot, likely a majority, of parents who have had next to no advice on how to raise kids. Furthermore, I would posit that many of them were not raised in particularly nurturing circumstances themselves.
As such, I would expect that the advice ChatGPT gives (i.e. an average from parenting advice blogs and forums), would on average result in better parenting.
That's obviously not to say that ChatGPT gives great advice, but that the bar is very low already.
You're right, as much as I'd like not to be aware of it. Indeed, the bar is very low.
Whether heeding ChatGPT advice would be better or worse than no advice at all, I honestly cannot say. On the one hand, getting some advice would probably help in many, many cases - there's a lot of low-hanging fruit here; on the other, low-quality advice has the potential to ruin the lives of multiple people at any moment. This is like medical or lawyer advice: very high stakes in many cases. Should we rely on a model that doesn't really understand the underlying logic for advice on such matters? The "average" of parenting blogs can be a mish-mash of different philosophies or approaches glued together, making up something that sounds plausible but leads to catastrophic results years or decades later.
I don't know. Parenting is a complex problem in itself; then you have people generally not looking for advice or being unable to recognize good advice. It doesn't look like adding a hallucinating AI model to the mix would help much, but I may be wrong on this. I guess we'll find out the hard way: through people trying (or not) it out and then living with consequences (if any).