His Holiness Pope Francis' Communications Day message: AI can never replace wisdom of human heart
In his message for the 58th World Day of Social Communications, His Holiness Pope Francis urges humanity to cultivate wisdom of the heart in the age of artificial intelligence.
By Francesca Merlo
His Holiness Pope Francis has released his message for the 2024 World Day of Social Communications, focusing on the theme: Artificial Intelligence and the Wisdom of the Heart: Towards a Fully Human Communication.
Celebrated on 12 May, this year's theme is closely linked to the Pope’s message for the World Day of Peace, which was devoted to the development of systems of artificial intelligence (AI).
AI is “radically affecting the world of information and communication, and through it, certain foundations of life in society,” says the Pope in his Communications Day message, adding that “these changes affect everyone.”
So, the Pope asks, “how can we remain fully human and guide this cultural transformation to serve a good purpose?”
Starting with the heart
In answering this question, the Holy Father notes that “at this time in history, which risks becoming rich in technology and poor in humanity, our reflections must begin with the human heart.”
He recalls that, in the Bible, the heart is seen as the place of freedom and decision-making, "symbolising integrity and unity, while also engaging our emotions, desires, and dreams."
But, he continues, the heart 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," says His Holiness Pope Francis.
Opportunity and danger
The Holy Father goes on to stress that such wisdom cannot be sought from machines.
Although the term "artificial intelligence" has replaced the term "machine learning," he said, “the very use of the word 'intelligence' can prove misleading."
The Pope explained that it is not enough to be able to store data, like machines do, but that this data must be made sense of, and “human beings alone” are capable of this.
“Depending on the inclination of the heart, everything within our reach becomes either an opportunity or a threat,” warns the Pope.
He notes that the technology of simulation behind AI algorithms can be useful in certain specific fields.
However, he adds, the use of AI becomes “perverse when it distorts our relationship with others and with reality.”
In fact, it is extremely important to know that in the wrong hands, such tools could lead to “disturbing scenarios.”
Artificial Intelligence must be regulated, asserts Pope Francis, acknowledging that, as in every human context, “regulation is, of itself, not sufficient.”
Growth in humanity
His Holiness Pope Francis then invites everyone to grow together, “in humanity and as humanity,” recalling that we are all challenged to make a qualitative leap in order to become “a complex, multiethnic, pluralistic, multireligious, and multicultural society.”
Speaking of information, the Holy Father warns that “information cannot be separated from living relationships.”
He explains that relationships involve the body and an immersion into the real world, but that they also involve human experiences, "compassion, and sharing.”
With this in mind, Pope Francis refers to the many reporters who have been injured or killed in the line of duty as they attempted to show the world 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 war," says the Pope.
Questions for today and for the future
Bringing his message for World Communications Day to a close, Pope Francis recalls that “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…"
This report was originally published on the website of Vatican News. Please click here to read the full text and listen to the report.