What does the Bible Say About AI: Session 1
This session will not shy away from the fact that the word "artificial intelligence" is nowhere to be found in the Bible. What we are dealing with is larger than the buzzwords. We are asking how we ought to interact with that which forms us.
This session will not be a marketing pitch for the potential of AI nor will be a time to recount AI’s real or imagined horrors. I want you to leave equipped to make your own faith decision about the best uses for AI in your life.
This session will not be a downer. We will leave with hope, because as followers of Jesus, we are people of hope.
I am a pastor, not an economist, politician, philosopher, or anything else. As a result, this study will be about how we are spiritually formed by technology, including AI. If you desire those other perspectives, others are far more informed than I am.
Ground Rules
Scriptural Wisdom: Wisdom is like a shotgun you can hit many wise options. Just because someone makes a different choice than you does not mean it is unwise on its face.
I will be nice to my neighbor and kind our discussions.
Cultural Spiritual Formation
Quote: “There neither is nor can be any simple increase of power on man’s side. Each new power won by man is a power over man as well. Each advance leaves him weaker as well as stronger.” C.S. Lewis, Abolition of Man (71)
Lewis makes the astute observation that every time humanity gains a new ability through some kind of technological advancement, it both forms us and deforms us in new and never-before-seen ways. We again have abilities that we never had previously, and it produces a capacity for vice previously unseen. Lewis argues that, though we may desire it, we can’t have just the positive impact and not the negative.
You can work from home, but we will log your every move.
You can be reached any time on your phone, but now you feel you have to be available all the time.
You get news from everywhere in the world but now you feel like you have to comment on every tragedy.
Our technology forms us, and because of the fallen nature of the world, there is no guarantee the formation it brings will be a net positive.
Let’s turn to a case study of this point in action.
Case Study: Social Media
On February 4th 2004, Mark Zuckerburg and several others founded thefacebook.com [http://thefacebook.com] a website that was designed to rate the attractiveness of their female classmates - an omen that perhaps we should have heeded. What followed over the next two decades was explosive growth not only of Facebook but an entire social media industry that previously didn’t exist.
Those of us who are Millennials, Gen Xers, and Baby Boomers quickly and often adopted this new technology largely and uncritically. It promised a greater connection with friends and loved ones. Fortunes were made in this new gold rush. Silly pictures and memes with friends abounded.
Simultaneously, a dark side began to flourish as Lewis predicted it would. Silk Road and other websites like it promised drugs and other illicit materials for sale. Anxiety and depression skyrocketed, particularly among teenagers. Nation-state actors influenced elections. On and on the list could go.
Now 20 years on, many of us are asking the question Was social media a net positive to our individual or our collective lives? Or I had social media as a child, and I am positive I won’t let my child have it now.
My Thesis starting assumption for this evening is that. In terms of the AI revolution, it is February 4, 2004. We do not yet know all the good or bad it will bring. As a result, we should follow the wisdom of our Lord: “Count the costs before we build our tower.”
Questions:
Based on your life experience, is Lewis right when he says, “Each new power won by man is a power over man as well”
If Lewis is right, where did you see technology have power over you in unexpected ways?
Reflecting on your use of social media over the last 20 years in light of what you now know, would you have changed how you interacted with it?