*** DEBUG START ***
*** DEBUG END ***

Paul Vallely: Should we worry about the AI revolution?

26 May 2023

Its sophistication impresses — but there is a dark side, warns Paul Vallely

iStock

SUDDENLY, everyone is getting worried about artificial intelligence (AI). The country’s top schools have warned of the “very real and present hazards and dangers” being presented by AI. The so-called godfather of AI, Dr Geoffrey Hinton, has resigned from Google, prophesying that the technology could up-end the job market. Another senior AI researcher warns of the possibility that a super-intelligent machine could wipe out humanity.

AI, which has progressed at a spectacular pace recently, allows supercomputers to “scrape” vast amounts of data from the worldwide web and process it with breath-taking speed to generate seemingly original content.

Its sophistication is impressive. One chatbot recently scored 96 per cent on an A-level maths paper. Apparently, half of all computer code is now AI-generated. A woman in South Shields was freed from bowel cancer after AI spotted problematic tissue unseen by the human eye.

But it has a dark downside, which has led to predictions of a dystopian future. AI turns out to be biased on race, gender, and other sensitive areas, because the titanic amounts of web-text that it trawls contains a range of undesirable factors — from hate speech to points of view that exclude marginalised people and places.

Power imbalances and inequalities, unfair treatment, and discrimination are perpetuated and even amplified. So is the worldview of affluent white males in the United States and Europe. In 2015, Google had to apologise when its AI identified a black couple as gorillas. There are fears that banks or governments using AI might reject certain groups unfairly for loans or benefits.

AI technology can be used to manipulate videos or recordings to create so-called deepfakes that show individuals doing or saying things that they never did. More insidiously, AI chatbots have been shown to make mistakes or make things up outright — a phenomenon known in the industry as “hallucinating” — which they can do with convincing authority.

This week, I asked ChatGPT: What are the theological shortcomings of AI? It responded with a sibylline remark about human dignity and the imago dei, and said that AI raised questions about the nature and uniqueness of human beings. But then it came up with some specious gobbledygook about human and divine creation, transcendence and immanence, and even ventured into eschatology (which makes a change, I suppose, from dystopia).

It was more helpful on ethics. Questioned about the ethical difference between the sending of a battalion into heavy enemy fire by an AI system or a human general, it had the simulated humility to accept that it lacked “the capacity for moral reasoning, empathy, and understanding of ethical nuances that come with experience and emotions”. Phew.

Politicians have been talking at the G7 summit in Hiroshima of the need for “guardrails” around the development of AI. But there is little concrete agreement between governments on how to police it.

Far more promising was the reaction of the pupils of Wimbledon High School, who have been experimenting with ChatGPT as a coursework aid. AI-generated essays, they say, are articulate and fluent, but they can lack originality and ideas. AI answers are unreliable, but helpful for learning how to structure arguments. “It will be a tool in our futures,” one student said. The answer is to “use it through proper critical thinking”. Nothing artificial about that intelligence.

Browse Church and Charity jobs on the Church Times jobsite

Letters to the editor

Letters for publication should be sent to letters@churchtimes.co.uk.

Letters should be exclusive to the Church Times, and include a full postal address. Your name and address will appear alongside your letter.

Forthcoming Events

 

Church Times/Sarum College:

Traditions of Christian Spirituality

January - May 2024

This is a five-part series on major strands of the Christian spiritual tradition.

Book individual session tickets or sign up for the full programme

 

Companions on the Way: a retreat in preparation for Lent:

Saturday 10 February 2024 - 10am - 1pm GMT

Jay Hulme, Rachel Mann, Rob Marshall, Nick Papadopulos, Richard Carter and worship by the St Martin’s Voices

Online Tickets available

 

RS Thomas & ME Eldridge Society in association with Church Times:

RS Thomas Winter webinar 2024

Saturday 17 February 2024 - 4pm - 5.15pm GMT

Malcolm Guite in conversation with Jon Gower

Online Tickets available

 

Church Times/RSCM:

Festival of Faith and Music

26 - 28 April 2024

See the full programme on the festival website. 

Early bird tickets available

 

 

Green Church Awards

Closing date: 30 June 2024

Read more details about the awards

 

The Church Times Archive

Read reports from issues stretching back to 1863, search for your parish or see if any of the clergy you know get a mention.

FREE for Church Times subscribers.

Explore the archive

Welcome to the Church Times

​To explore the Church Times website fully, please sign in or subscribe.

Non-subscribers can read four articles for free each month. (You will need to register.)