Pope on artificial intelligence:
Technology is a human charactercteristic
Pope Francis addressing the members of the Plenary Assembly of the Pontifical Academy for Life (Vatican Media) |
Pope Francis addresses the Pontifical Academy for Life in a
Plenary Assembly marking 25 years of activity, on the theme “Roboethics.
People, machines and health”.
By Francesca Merlo
Despite all of the potential that science has, the
accumulation of it all does not always obtain the results hoped for, says Pope
Francis when addressing the Plenary Assembly of the Pontifical Academy of
sciences.
All that science could offer
We know the problems our world is facing, says the Pope, and
one of them is that we seem to be closing in more and more on ourselves. This,
he says, underlines a “dramatic paradox”: that at the point in which science
could offer the equal well-being that God wished for to all people, “we observe
an embittering of conflicts and a growth of inequality”.
There are two sides to technology, continues the Pope. On
the one hand, we cannot go without it; on the other hand, it imposes its logic
upon us. “Yet,” says the pope, “technology is a human characteristic”.
However, what we must understand, continues the pope, is
that the artificial devices that simulate human capacities, are in fact,
lacking in human qualities. These machines, says the Pope cannot take into
consideration the phenomena of experience or that of conscience.
Benefits of science on every person
This must be taken into account, says the Pope, when
imposing the regulations for the use of these machines, and in researching
them. In order to work towards a constructive interaction between humans and
the most recent versions of these machines, which he says “are radically
transforming the scenario of our existence.” The Pope explains that “if we are
able to make use of these references in practice, the extraordinary potential
of new discoveries can radiate their benefits on every person and on humanity
as a whole.”
Sharing in order to benefit
Pope Francis ends his address by saying that the task of the
Academy is an honourable one in “the ethical alliance in favour of human life”.
Now that we are surrounded by more and more sophisticated machinery, and that
they directly involve human qualities, both physical and of the psyche, the
sharing of information between those working in the field becomes more and more
important.
He urges the participants at the Assembly to take the
example of the faithful masters of this technology “who have wisely and boldly
entered into the processes of their contemporaneity, with a view to an understanding
of the heritage of faith at the height of a reason worthy of humanity”.
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét