MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS
FOR THE 58th WORLD DAY OF SOCIAL COMMUNICATIONS
Artificial Intelligence and the Wisdom of the
Heart:
Towards a Fully Human Communication
Dear brothers and sisters!
The development of systems of artificial
intelligence, to which I devoted my recent
Message for the World Day of Peace, is radically
affecting the world of information and
communication, and through it, certain
foundations of life in society. These changes
affect everyone, not merely professionals in
those fields. The rapid spread of astonishing
innovations, whose workings and potential are
beyond the ability of most of us to understand
and appreciate, has proven both exciting and
disorienting. This leads inevitably to deeper
questions about the nature of human beings, our
distinctiveness and the future of the species
homo sapiens in the age of artificial
intelligence. How can we remain fully human and
guide this cultural transformation to serve a
good purpose?
Starting with the heart
Before all else, we need to set aside
catastrophic predictions and their numbing
effects. A century ago, Romano Guardini
reflected on technology and humanity. Guardini
urged us not to reject “the new” in an attempt
to “preserve a beautiful world condemned to
disappear”. At the same time, he prophetically
warned that “we are constantly in the process of
becoming. We must enter into this process, each
in his or her own way, with openness but also
with sensitivity to everything that is
destructive and inhumane therein”. And he
concluded: “These are technical, scientific and
political problems, but they cannot be resolved
except by starting from our humanity. A new kind
of human being must take shape, endowed with a
deeper spirituality and new freedom and
interiority”. [1]
At this time in history, which risks becoming
rich in technology and poor in humanity, our
reflections must begin with the human heart. [2]
Only by adopting a spiritual way of viewing
reality, only by recovering a wisdom of the
heart, can we confront and interpret the newness
of our time and rediscover the path to a fully
human communication. In the Bible, the heart is
seen as the place of freedom and
decision-making. It symbolizes integrity and
unity, but it also engages our emotions,
desires, dreams; it is, above all, the inward
place of our encounter with God. Wisdom of the
heart, then, is the virtue that enables us to
integrate the whole and its parts, our decisions
and their consequences, our nobility and our
vulnerability, our past and our future, our
individuality and our membership within a larger
community.
This wisdom of the heart lets itself be found by
those who seek it and be seen by those who love
it; it anticipates those who desire it and it
goes in search of those who are worthy of it
(cf. Wis 6:12-16). It accompanies those willing
to take advice (cf. Prov 13:10), those endowed
with a docile and listening heart (cf. 1 Kg
3:9). A gift of the Holy Spirit, it enables us
to look at things with God’s eyes, to see
connections, situations, events and to uncover
their real meaning. Without this kind of wisdom,
life becomes bland, since it is precisely wisdom
– whose Latin root sapere is related to the noun
sapor – that gives “savour” to life.
Opportunity and danger
Such wisdom cannot be sought from machines.
Although the term “artificial intelligence” has
now supplanted the more correct term, “machine
learning”, used in scientific literature, the
very use of the word “intelligence” can prove
misleading. No doubt, machines possess a
limitlessly greater capacity than human beings
for storing and correlating data, but human
beings alone are capable of making sense of that
data. It is not simply a matter of making
machines appear more human, but of awakening
humanity from the slumber induced by the
illusion of omnipotence, based on the belief
that we are completely autonomous and
self-referential subjects, detached from all
social bonds and forgetful of our status as
creatures.
Human beings have always realized that they are
not self-sufficient and have sought to overcome
their vulnerability by employing every means
possible. From the earliest prehistoric
artifacts, used as extensions of the arms, and
then the media, used as an extension of the
spoken word, we have now become capable of
creating highly sophisticated machines that act
as a support for thinking. Each of these
instruments, however, can be abused by the
primordial temptation to become like God without
God (cf. Gen 3), that is, to want to grasp by
our own effort what should instead be freely
received as a gift from God, to be enjoyed in
the company of others.
Depending on the inclination of the heart,
everything within our reach becomes either an
opportunity or a threat. Our very bodies,
created for communication and communion, can
become a means of aggression. So too, every
technical extension of our humanity can be a
means of loving service or of hostile
domination. Artificial intelligence systems can
help to overcome ignorance and facilitate the
exchange of information between different
peoples and generations. For example, they can
render accessible and understandable an enormous
patrimony of written knowledge from past ages or
enable communication between individuals who do
not share a common language. Yet, at the same
time, they can be a source of “cognitive
pollution”, a distortion of reality by partially
or completely false narratives, believed and
broadcast as if they were true. We need but
think of the long-standing problem of
disinformation in the form of fake news, [3]
which today can employ “deepfakes”, namely the
creation and diffusion of images that appear
perfectly plausible but false (I too have been
an object of this), or of audio messages that
use a person’s voice to say things which that
person never said. The technology of simulation
behind these programmes can be useful in certain
specific fields, but it becomes perverse when it
distorts our relationship with others and with
reality.
Starting with the first wave of artificial
intelligence, that of social media, we have
experienced its ambivalence: its possibilities
but also its risks and associated pathologies.
The second level of generative artificial
intelligence unquestionably represents a
qualitative leap. It is important therefore to
understand, appreciate and regulate instruments
that, in the wrong hands could lead to
disturbing scenarios. Like every other product
of human intelligence and skill, algorithms are
not neutral. For this reason, there is a need to
act preventively, by proposing models of ethical
regulation, to forestall harmful, discriminatory
and socially unjust effects of the use of
systems of artificial intelligence and to combat
their misuse for the purpose of reducing
pluralism, polarizing public opinion or creating
forms of groupthink. I once more appeal to the
international community “to work together in
order to adopt a binding international treaty
that regulates the development and use of
artificial intelligence in its many forms”. [4]
At the same time, as in every human context,
regulation is, of itself, not sufficient.
Growth in humanity
All of us are called to grow together, in
humanity and as humanity. We are challenged to
make a qualitative leap in order to become a
complex, multiethnic, pluralistic,
multireligious and multicultural society. We are
called to reflect carefully on the theoretical
development and the practical use of these new
instruments of communication and knowledge.
Their great possibilities for good are
accompanied by the risk of turning everything
into abstract calculations that reduce
individuals to data, thinking to a mechanical
process, experience to isolated cases, goodness
to profit, and, above all, a denial of the
uniqueness of each individual and his or her
story. The concreteness of reality dissolves in
a flurry of statistical data.
The digital revolution can bring us greater
freedom, but not if it imprisons us in models
that nowadays are called “echo chambers”. In
such cases, rather than increasing a pluralism
of information, we risk finding ourselves adrift
in a mire of confusion, prey to the interests of
the market or of the powers that be. It is
unacceptable that the use of artificial
intelligence should lead to groupthink, to a
gathering of unverified data, to a collective
editorial dereliction of duty. The
representation of reality in “big data”, however
useful for the operation of machines, ultimately
entails a substantial loss of the truth of
things, hindering interpersonal communication
and threatening our very humanity. Information
cannot be separated from living relationships.
These involve the body and immersion in the real
world; they involve correlating not only data
but also human experiences; they require
sensitivity to faces and facial expressions,
compassion and sharing.
Here I think of the reporting of wars and the
“parallel war” being waged through campaigns of
disinformation. I think too of all those
reporters who have been injured or killed in the
line of duty in order to enable us to see what
they themselves had seen. For only by such
direct contact with the suffering of children,
women and men, can we come to appreciate the
absurdity of wars.
The use of artificial intelligence can make a
positive contribution to the communications
sector, provided it does not eliminate the role
of journalism on the ground but serves to
support it. Provided too that it values the
professionalism of communication, making every
communicator more aware of his or her
responsibilities, and enables all people to be,
as they should, discerning participants in the
work of communication.
Questions for today and for the future
In this regard, a number of questions naturally
arise. How do we safeguard professionalism and
the dignity of workers in the fields of
information and communication, together with
that of users throughout the world? How do we
ensure the interoperability of platforms? How do
we enable businesses that develop digital
platforms to accept their responsibilities with
regard to content and advertising in the same
way as editors of traditional communications
media? How do we make more transparent the
criteria guiding the operation of algorithms for
indexing and de-indexing, and for search engines
that are capable of celebrating or canceling
persons and opinions, histories and cultures?
How do we guarantee the transparency of
information processing? How do we identify the
paternity of writings and the traceability of
sources concealed behind the shield of
anonymity? How do we make it clear whether an
image or video is portraying an event or
simulating it? How do we prevent sources from
being reduced to one alone, thus fostering a
single approach, developed on the basis of an
algorithm? How instead do we promote an
environment suitable for preserving pluralism
and portraying the complexity of reality? How
can we make sustainable a technology so
powerful, costly and energy-consuming? And how
can we make it accessible also to developing
countries?
The answers we give to these and other questions
will determine if artificial intelligence will
end up creating new castes based on access to
information and thus giving rise to new forms of
exploitation and inequality. Or, if it will lead
to greater equality by promoting correct
information and a greater awareness of the
epochal change that we are experiencing by
making it possible to acknowledge the many needs
of individuals and of peoples within a
well-structured and pluralistic network of
information. If, on the one hand, we can glimpse
the spectre of a new form of slavery, on the
other, we can also envision a means of greater
freedom; either the possibility that a select
few can condition the thought of others, or that
all people can participate in the development of
thought.
The answer we give to these questions is not
pre-determined; it depends on us. It is up to us
to decide whether we will become fodder for
algorithms or will nourish our hearts with that
freedom without which we cannot grow in wisdom.
Such wisdom matures by using time wisely and
embracing our vulnerabilities. It grows in the
covenant between generations, between those who
remember the past and who look ahead to the
future. Only together can we increase our
capacity for discernment and vigilance and for
seeing things in the light of their fulfilment.
Lest our humanity lose its bearings, let us seek
the wisdom that was present before all things
(cf. Sir 1:4): it will help us also to put
systems of artificial intelligence at the
service of a fully human communication.
Rome, Saint John Lateran, 24 January 2024
FRANCIS
[1] Letters from Lake Como.
[2] The 2024 Message for the World Day of Social
Communications takes up the preceding Messages
devoted to encountering persons where and how
they are (2021), to hearing with the ear of the
heart (2022) and speaking to the heart (2023).
[3] Cf. “The Truth Will Make You Free” (Jn
8:32). Fake News and Journalism for Peace,
Message for the 2018 World Day of Social
Communications.
[4] Message for the 57th World Day of Peace, 1
January 2024, 8.
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