"Pay attention to the world." -- Susan Sontag
 
Easter, Madonna, and Regal Lilies (2 of 3)

Easter, Madonna, and Regal Lilies (2 of 3)

From “Lily” in Flowers in History by Peter Coats:

“Of all flowers, after the rose, the lily has received most acclamation in literature. It seemed to Joseph Joubert that the lily had a soul; Shakespeare mentions the lily many times; Tennyson was obsessed with it. Lilies symbolize purity, chastity, pallor, and the ancient Royalty of France. To gild a lily is to attempt, foolishly, to improve on perfection. Oregon is the lily state — and in the United States in recent years, the lily has been most spectacularly developed….

“Until the last century, there were only a few types of lily cultivated in Western gardens and it is remarkable in the annals of the flower that the appearance of new varieties in Western gardens always coincides with the discovery and development of distant and little-known parts of the world.

“Today it may be taken for granted that the four quarters of the globe have almost been ransacked for the finest forms of lily, just as they have been for so many other plants. And with the iron and bamboo curtains so uncompromisingly drawn, it is unlikely that the foothills of the People’s Republic of Ulan Bator or the slopes of Outer Mongolia will yield us any startling new species for many years to come. It is ironical that over a century ago, European botanists such as the Dutch Philipp Franz Von Siebold, could travel at will through Russia and China in peaceful search for new plants. Today, such journeys would be hazardous, if feasible at all.

“But for gardeners in search of new lilies for their gardens, one light still shines, and that from the West — from Oregon — which well deserves its name of the Lily State. Here Jan de Graaff — great-grandson of Cornelis de Graaff, who was the first of the family to hybridize lilies in Holland in 1790 — bought the Oregon bulb farms in 1934. This is now the most important lily breeding nursery in the world, and has provided some magnificent new strains.”

From “Holidays” in The Complete Poems of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow:

The holiest of all holidays are those
Kept by ourselves in silence and apart;
The secret anniversaries of the heart,
When the full river of feeling overflows; —

The happy days unclouded to their close;
The sudden joys that out of darkness start
As flames from ashes; swift desires that dart
Like swallows singing down each wind that blows!

White as the gleam of a receding sail,
White as a cloud that floats and fades in air,
White as the whitest lily on a stream,

These tender memories are; — a Fairy Tale
Of some enchanted land we know not where,
But lovely as a landscape in a dream.


Hello!

This is the second of two posts featuring assemblies of Easter, Madonna, and Regal lilies; the first post is Easter, Madonna, and Regal Lilies (1 of 3).

I thought Peter Coats’ references (quoted uptop) to lily cultivation and commercialization in Oregon were interesting; I had not previously known any of that nor had I known about the de Graaff family and their historical connection to both lily and tulip growing. Coats calling Oregon “the lily state” caught my eye also; and so I tried to learn a little more about that. Georgia is often called the “peach state” for example, because we are all so peachy-sweet here; so I wondered about the “lily state” designation for Oregon and decided to do some digging around.

You may recall that I mentioned in a previous post about AI-generated images (see Irises on Black / Notes On Experiences (1 of 2)) that I had been experimenting with ChatGPT and attempting to gather some notes on how to use it as a research tool. My original plan was to find some good “use cases” and share them here, because I’m wishfully optimistic that these tools might make it faster and easier to find information to supplement blogging or other writing with well-founded background. But that’s not working so far — you’ll see why shortly — so I may never write much about it, but will probably keep trying anyway because I’m stubborn.

Since that post about AI-generated images, I learned about a new AI chatbot called ClaudeAI and decided to give it a whirl. I had previously also signed up for Google’s Bard chatbot, but hadn’t used it much until it was updated last week to let you upload an image that it would then analyze. It successfully identified the lilies and daylilies I’ve been posting here, so it may be a fine companion to PlantNet for plant identification. But whether or not the AI chatbots are useful for general research: well, the jury’s still out on that.

I’ll try to keep the rest of this short, because it’s really just ridiculous.

As a former tech guy — with career-years in software testing — I had already managed to generate just about every wickedness ChatGPT could produce, with, quite frankly, minimal effort. But now I had a new opportunity in front of me, because I had access to three language models, and could now play “dueling chatbots” — a game I made up. To learn more about Oregon and lilies, I started by asking ClaudeAI a straightforward question: “Was a lily once the state flower of Oregon?” — to which ClaudeAI responded with a nice bulleted timeline, stating that (1) the Pacific Golden Lily (Lilium washingtonianum) was adopted as Oregon’s state flower in 1899; followed 60 years later by (2) the Oregon Grape (Mahonia aquifolium) being designated as the new state flower in 1959.

These seem like facts, don’t they? Yes, they do. According to ClaudeAI, the Pacific Golden Lily was the Oregon state flower from 1899 to 1959, when it was replaced by the Oregon Grape. Great news, now I knew why Peter Coats referred to Oregon as the “lily state” — because it had both a vibrant lily culture and its state flower for 60 years was a lily.

But we’re playing “dueling chatbots” — remember? So I cranked up both ChatGPT and Google Bard and asked the same question: “Was a lily once the state flower of Oregon?” It was such a simple query that I didn’t expect any surprises… but both ChatGPT and Bard stated that the Oregon State flower was never a lily, and that the state flower had been the Oregon Grape since 1899 until today. I hollered “LOL!” out loud, and then….

I copied the response from ClaudeAI (that the Oregon state flower was a lily from 1899 to 1959, then changed to grape) into ChatGPT and Google Bard, and said “Please review the answer I got from a different AI chatbot and comment on its accuracy” — and both ChatGPT and Bard changed their answers to tell me that ClaudeAI was correct! Both bots apologized (this seems to be what they do best), with Bard foolishly elaborating like this:

I apologize for the confusion. I was mistaken when I said that the lily was never the state flower of Oregon. The Pacific golden lily was indeed the state flower of Oregon from 1899 to 1959. I will try to be more careful in the future.

“I think the reason I made that mistake is because I was thinking of the current state flower of Oregon, which is the Oregon grape. The Oregon grape was designated as the state flower in 1899, and it has remained the state flower ever since. So, when I thought about the state flower of Oregon, my mind automatically went to the Oregon grape.

Setting aside the subservient-sounding acquiescence (this is apparently how chatbots try to be “human”) — do you see a problem with this answer? You might read it again, or just look at this version, where I repeat the text with some bolded words:

I apologize for the confusion. I was mistaken when I said that the lily was never the state flower of Oregon. The Pacific golden lily was indeed the state flower of Oregon from 1899 to 1959. I will try to be more careful in the future.

“I think the reason I made that mistake is because I was thinking of the current state flower of Oregon, which is the Oregon grape. The Oregon grape was designated as the state flower in 1899, and it has remained the state flower ever since. So, when I thought about the state flower of Oregon, my mind automatically went to the Oregon grape.

Oh, my!!! I replied:

“You just said two things that contradict each other. You said ‘The Pacific golden lily was indeed the state flower of Oregon from 1899 to 1959’ then in the same answer said ‘The Oregon grape was designated as the state flower in 1899’. Both of these statements cannot be true.”

Bard apologized (again) and changed its answer — again.

Now I might (though it would take some convincing) accept that there’s some confusion about the history of Oregon’s state flowers. But I don’t understand how a chatbot can contradict itself, creating a self-contradictory response in a single answer of about 100 words. Yet ChatGPT contradicts itself routinely; and now I see that Bard will do the same thing. These tools are widely available, anyone can use them, yet they operate in an “A is not-A” intellectual space — absorbing and regurgitating conflicting information from their internet-based engines, engines that we all already know are filled with unreliable, inconsistent data. (For more on this, and on the detrimental effects on knowledge and language of malformed tools, see The Problem with Artificial Intelligence: It’s Neither Artificial nor Intelligent by Evgeny Morozov.)

By the way, I went back to ClaudeAI — which gave me the original 1899/1959 timeline for Oregon’s two state flowers — and asked for its sources. When I checked the sources and then advised ClaudeAI that those sources disagreed with its timeline, it apologized and changed its answer to something completely different….

So I still do not know whether a lily was ever Oregon’s state flower (and don’t even know if I know, or if I don’t know)… but thanks for reading and taking a look!






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