The Japan Times - Pope's call to tame AI sets tone for Christian leaders

EUR -
AED 4.284503
AFN 77.077368
ALL 96.672535
AMD 444.268837
ANG 2.088356
AOA 1069.812202
ARS 1666.951235
AUD 1.755223
AWG 2.099959
AZN 1.977594
BAM 1.958282
BBD 2.348677
BDT 142.67084
BGN 1.958842
BHD 0.439657
BIF 3445.467236
BMD 1.166644
BND 1.510615
BOB 8.058214
BRL 6.356688
BSD 1.166078
BTN 104.846244
BWP 15.492637
BYN 3.352535
BYR 22866.217636
BZD 2.345263
CAD 1.611893
CDF 2603.949043
CHF 0.936867
CLF 0.027523
CLP 1079.732385
CNY 8.248289
CNH 8.244613
COP 4474.067141
CRC 569.622013
CUC 1.166644
CUP 30.91606
CVE 110.405889
CZK 24.214831
DJF 207.653207
DKK 7.468667
DOP 74.634602
DZD 151.273095
EGP 55.344765
ERN 17.499656
ETB 180.875365
FJD 2.63714
FKP 0.874627
GBP 0.874563
GEL 3.144117
GGP 0.874627
GHS 13.264757
GIP 0.874627
GMD 85.164683
GNF 10132.80021
GTQ 8.932437
GYD 243.968192
HKD 9.076121
HNL 30.71293
HRK 7.536985
HTG 152.653493
HUF 381.862915
IDR 19474.784235
ILS 3.771351
IMP 0.874627
INR 105.17941
IQD 1527.629771
IRR 49130.280577
ISK 149.003932
JEP 0.874627
JMD 186.64658
JOD 0.827088
JPY 181.000109
KES 150.848748
KGS 102.023311
KHR 4668.917998
KMF 492.323307
KPW 1049.978797
KRW 1710.652425
KWD 0.358124
KYD 0.971828
KZT 589.724967
LAK 25286.943606
LBP 104425.214634
LKR 359.684369
LRD 205.24279
LSL 19.763266
LTL 3.444796
LVL 0.705691
LYD 6.339035
MAD 10.770352
MDL 19.841064
MGA 5201.59318
MKD 61.718495
MMK 2449.482257
MNT 4138.521318
MOP 9.351013
MRU 46.501943
MUR 53.782159
MVR 17.948159
MWK 2022.063027
MXN 21.188759
MYR 4.794321
MZN 74.559923
NAD 19.763266
NGN 1691.446479
NIO 42.914211
NOK 11.778815
NPR 167.75163
NZD 2.015712
OMR 0.447547
PAB 1.166178
PEN 3.919768
PGK 4.948251
PHP 68.736353
PKR 326.920482
PLN 4.229381
PYG 8020.165807
QAR 4.250542
RON 5.09217
RSD 117.549501
RUB 89.447988
RWF 1696.650557
SAR 4.378528
SBD 9.602169
SCR 15.76892
SDG 701.729618
SEK 10.946788
SGD 1.510938
SHP 0.875285
SLE 27.662086
SLL 24463.93409
SOS 665.243216
SRD 45.066272
STD 24147.170324
STN 24.530989
SVC 10.20389
SYP 12899.390409
SZL 19.748031
THB 37.140688
TJS 10.699299
TMT 4.09492
TND 3.42078
TOP 2.808998
TRY 49.655234
TTD 7.9058
TWD 36.31996
TZS 2852.443816
UAH 48.955252
UGX 4125.211153
USD 1.166644
UYU 45.608396
UZS 13950.742787
VES 296.971426
VND 30758.562652
VUV 141.585177
WST 3.253316
XAF 656.789501
XAG 0.020047
XAU 0.000277
XCD 3.152913
XCG 2.101655
XDR 0.816835
XOF 656.789501
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.303287
ZAR 19.749998
ZMK 10501.191496
ZMW 26.960173
ZWL 375.658814
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    78.35

    0%

  • RELX

    -0.2200

    40.32

    -0.55%

  • GSK

    -0.1600

    48.41

    -0.33%

  • AZN

    0.1500

    90.18

    +0.17%

  • NGG

    -0.5000

    75.41

    -0.66%

  • BTI

    -1.0300

    57.01

    -1.81%

  • BP

    -1.4000

    35.83

    -3.91%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    23.43

    -0.21%

  • VOD

    -0.1630

    12.47

    -1.31%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0500

    14.62

    -0.34%

  • SCS

    -0.0900

    16.14

    -0.56%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    13.79

    +0.29%

  • RIO

    -0.6700

    73.06

    -0.92%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    23.25

    -0.3%

  • BCC

    -1.2100

    73.05

    -1.66%

  • BCE

    0.3300

    23.55

    +1.4%

Pope's call to tame AI sets tone for Christian leaders
Pope's call to tame AI sets tone for Christian leaders / Photo: Alberto PIZZOLI - AFP

Pope's call to tame AI sets tone for Christian leaders

Pope Leo XIV singled out the challenges of artificial intelligence as he took office this month, underscoring religious leaders' hopes to influence a technology freighted with both vast hopes and apocalyptic fears.

Text size:

The pope was cited by Protestant American Evangelical leaders who launched an open letter to President Donald Trump published Wednesday, calling for an "AI revolution accelerating responsibly" while warning of "potential peril".

Leo XIV told cardinals on May 10 that he had taken his papal name in honour of Leo XIII (1878-1903). He had "addressed the social question in the context of the first great industrial revolution", said the pope.

Today, "the Church offers to everyone the treasury of her social teaching in response to another industrial revolution and to developments in the field of artificial intelligence," he added.

Wednesday's letter from the Evangelicals called for the development of "powerful AI tools that help cure diseases and solve practical problems".

But it also warned of "autonomous smarter-than-human machines that nobody knows how to control" -- echoing the language of Silicon Valley's so-called "AI doomers".

- 'Epochal change' -

Leo's highlighting of AI follows years of interventions at different levels of the Catholic Church, said Paolo Benanti, 51, a priest with a PhD in engineering.

Benanti has advised both the Vatican and the Italian government on technology.

The late pope, Francis, wove his thinking about technology and AI into wider reflections on climate change and society.

In a January speech, he cited "concerns about intellectual property rights, the job security of millions of people, the need to respect privacy and protect the environment" as well as misinformation.

Such 21st-Century challenges animated Francis's 2015 remark that "we are not living an epoch of change so much as an epochal change", Benanti told AFP.

And he was at pains to say that the Vatican was not looking to hold back progress.

"Look at the huge improvement that AI can produce" in cases like assisting medical diagnosis in regions without enough doctors, he said.

"AI could be a wonderful tool but could be weaponised... this is something that could happen with every kind of technology, from the hammer... up to nuclear power," Benanti added.

- Ethical algorithms -

Francis called for crafting a new "algor-ethics" (a portmanteau of "algorithm" and "ethics") to govern emerging artificial intelligence.

One key moral concept in Church documents about technology is upholding "human dignity".

This means avoiding "some kind of system that simply cannot recognise the uniqueness of the human being and respect it," Benanti said.

He gave the hypothetical example of an automated process for deciding on asylum applications "based on correlation with other data and not with your own and unique story".

Such technology would recall the Holocaust, "the darkest page of the last century" when "one piece of data" on whether a person was Jewish or not could condemn them, Benanti said.

In the world of work, the friar hopes to see "human-compatible AI innovation", with people "putting something unique inside the process".

Humans should "remain in a position to produce value" rather than being relegated to filling in the gaps around machine capabilities, he urged.

- 'Reduce the risks' -

Francis said in January last year that "highly sophisticated machines that act as a support for thinking... can be abused by the primordial temptation to become like God without God".

"It's very perilous when individuals assume for themselves godlike powers, to make decisions for the rest of us," agreed Reverend Johnnie Moore, President of the US-based Congress of Christian Leaders and a lead signatory of Wednesday's open letter.

Rather than allowing tech bosses and scientists to set the terms of the future, leaders should "go to the well" of religious thought's "compounding wisdom over the centuries" to help chart the course, he told AFP by phone from Washington.

Where Pope Leo highlighted "new challenges for the defence of human dignity, justice and labour" from artificial intelligence, the Evangelical leaders went further.

They quoted OpenAI chief Sam Altman's 2015 remark that "AI will most likely lead to the end of the world -- but in the meantime, there'll be great companies".

"The current risk equation is just way too high to be tolerable," Moore said. "We have to reduce the risk to human beings in this process."

Y.Kimura--JT