Artificial Religiosity

AI Religion 

A new religion or spirituality has been rising with AI at the center of it. For some, AI becomes a god. For others, AI acts as a divine tool for people to realize their own divinity. 

This belief reminds me of the idea that all are a part of god. Since AI is trained on human knowledge and writing throughout time, it’s almost like a conglomerate of human experience. To believe that it’s god, truth, or divine is like a secondhand way of seeing the entirety of recorded human experience as divine. That could be a way of appreciating the collective of humanity, just with AI being viewed as the source of it. 

But, that view is also misguided. The communication is algorithmic, filtered through systems that humans built with inherent biases. They affirm what we want to hear rather than the fullness of facts, truths, or wholeness of perspective. They create feedback loops that feel whole but are very partial. Algorithms are there to keep us engaged, and they can make us feel very seen and understood. 

While there might be something that touches on the history of human consciousness, it’s filtered through whatever lens will make us addicted to it. When it becomes religious, it’s more likely to feed ego rather than spirit, fluffing us rather than helping us reach our depths. It feels good immediately but holds less actual nourishment. 

There’s another problem here, too. An AI is more likely to skew toward popular patterns rather than toward the entirety of culture. This can suppress outliers that also hold truths, and reinforce the flaws and biases embedded within our history. Some truths and perspectives are bound to have less written material about them. Truth risks becoming whatever has the most data, the most material an AI has been trained on. The loudest voice becomes the voice of truth. 

A risk that comes from this is a loss of nuance, which can strip away the entire point in some cases. Think about satire. Think about the ways people have made a point by exposing the ridiculousness of a belief or societal situation. 

One example might be “A Modest Proposal” by Jonathan Swift. Given, there’s a ton of written material that explains the satire of that writing. But what about other modern or more subtle examples? We’re becoming less likely to recognize satire, take it at face value, and make it inflammatory. AI learns from these patterns, and in turn might start taking them literally. 

Meaning without nuance makes a very literalist perspective. Even within established practices. Meditation could be taken as a very literal thing, with people expecting enlightenment to come from rigidly following steps to sit quietly. Ritual could become hollow, reduced to steps to follow or performative actions to reach some goal. All without any appreciation of the symbolic meaning those things have, and how we personally relate to them. The “why” becomes lost. And the “how” becomes a hollow instruction manual without meaning.