Technology will never be a god – but has it become a religion?
- Written by Charles Barbour, Associate Professor, Philosophy, Western Sydney University
Way back in September 2015, the controversial engineer, entrepreneur and Silicon Valley magnate Anthony Levandowski[1] set out to establish a new religion. He called it the Way of the Future – or WOTF.
According to documents filed with the state of California at the time, the aim of WOTF[2] was to “develop and promote the realisation of a Godhead based on Artificial Intelligence”.
Levandowski’s idea was that, even though it had not yet been born, we should all begin worshipping a technological god in advance. For, on the inevitable day of its arrival, that might be the only way to avoid its horrible wrath.
Review: Tech Agnostic: How Technology Became the World’s Most Powerful Religion, and Why It Desperately Needs a Reformation – Greg M. Epstein (MIT Press)
Almost a decade later, technology has yet to reach the status of a god, either vengeful or benevolent. But the use of religious language to describe technology has become widespread.
Those working on AI, for example, tell us that its powers will soon become “magical[3]”. Modern day prophets like Ray Kurtzweil and his many followers insist we are on the verge of a “singularity[4]”, in which technology will allow us to surpass all previous limitations on human existence, including death.
Figures like Sam Altman[5], the CEO of OpenAI, can be heard saying things like[6] “I don’t pray for God to be on my side, I pray to be on God’s side”, and “working on these models definitely feels like being on the side of the angels”.
Even the billionaire media mogul Oprah Winfrey has assured us, in a recent television special, that contemporary intelligent technology is nothing less than “miraculous[7]”.
The tech religion
This surfeit of religious rhetoric could be chalked up to the ostentatious hyperbole that characterises Silicon Valley capitalism. Indeed, draping commodities in the patina of divinity is hardly a new marketing strategy.
But according to Greg Epstein, the secular ethicist and former humanist chaplain at Harvard and MIT, we find ourselves talking about modern technology in religious terms because modern technology (or what he calls “tech”) has effectively become a religion. And “not only a religion”. Epstein declares tech “the dominant religion of our time”.
No other force on the planet attracts as much praise. No other power demands as much devotion. Nothing else has such a firm grip on the rituals and practices of our daily lives.
Read more https://theconversation.com/technology-will-never-be-a-god-but-has-it-become-a-religion-243800