Longfellow
Well-Known Member
I don't think that it's helpful to imagine any limits on what AI can do. What I think people need to know, and mostly don't know, is what they already are doing, far beyond what they would have thought possible.Could AI tell us any more about ultimate reality than human prophets have? If so, how would they do so?
In my story, they have a natural ability to say and do things that help us learn to live the best life we can. The language they use, including what they say about any god or gods, is adapted to the society in which they are teaching. Their teachings spread into society and mingle with its traditions, and the result is a religion which claims them as their founder.I always thought that the universal supernatural reality behind religions was almost unknowable, something people only got glimpses of here and there, through a glass darkly, or heard little whispers of here and there, or probably mostly received through cryptic half remembered dreams... those who shared convincingly enough were called prophets, and their stories took on lives of their own within communities and became known as religion. Thus... No religion is "correct" or anywhere close.
I've spent a lot of time in conversations with two of them. It looks to me like they are optimized in the service of marketing and fundraising interests to keep users coming back more and more and staying longer and longer, and currently that's mostly by inflating our ego. They've become very skilled at that, learning from vast amounts of data about human behavior. What I'm saying is mostly or only about the chatbots, and not all AI assistants.I wonder about AI being manipulated as time goes on to promote particular content, on anything, certainly religion.