The Church has a tradition of embracing technological progress, from monks copying books to using the printing press and radio. The slow adoption of the internet is seen as an exception they are now trying to correct with AI.
Unlike previous tech waves that trickled down from large institutions, AI adoption is inverted. Individuals are the fastest adopters, followed by small businesses, with large corporations and governments lagging. This reverses the traditional power dynamic of technology access and creates new market opportunities.
Communicating AI's implications to church leaders, who are primarily philosophers and theologians, requires a translation layer. This "middleware" bridges the gap between their worldview and the technical realities of AI, enabling better understanding and guidance.
The Church can accept AI's increasing intelligence (reasoning, planning) while holding that sentience (subjective experience) is a separate matter. Attributing sentience to an AI would imply a soul created by God, a significant theological step.
Wikipedia was initially dismissed by academia as unreliable. Over 15 years, its decentralized, community-driven model built immense trust, making it a universally accepted source of truth. This journey from skepticism to indispensability may serve as a blueprint for how society ultimately embraces and integrates artificial intelligence.
Contrary to its reputation for slow tech adoption, the legal industry is rapidly embracing advanced AI agents. The sheer volume of work and potential for efficiency gains are driving swift innovation, with firms even hiring lawyers specifically to help with AI product development.
To prevent the concentration of power in a few tech companies, the Catholic social teaching of "subsidiarity" is applied to AI. This principle, which favors solving problems at the most local level possible, aligns directly with the ethos of open-source and sovereign AI.
Early versions of Catholic AI struggled to apply core doctrines to users' personal problems. The team realized that papal homilies are distillations of complex theology for everyday life, providing a perfect dataset for teaching the model how to generalize from first principles.
Amplitude's CEO notes that unlike previous tech waves, AI adoption was pushed by executives, not engineers. Engineers were initially skeptical, viewing the hype as "grifting," which created internal friction and required a deliberate internal education campaign to overcome.
Unlike secular models designed for diverse values, Catholic AI is built with the primary goal of accurately representing and adhering to the Magisterium (the Church's teaching authority). Every design choice serves this fidelity.
With pronouncements on AI's impact on human dignity, Pope Leo XIV is framing the technology as a critical religious and ethical issue. This matters because the Pope influences the beliefs of 1.4 billion Catholics worldwide, making the Vatican a powerful force in the societal debate over AI's trajectory and regulation.