WEF Advisor: AI will write a new Bible to create unified religions
Yuval Noah Harari. Photo: focus.ua
Yuval Noah Harari, the Senior Adviser to the World Economic Forum (WEF) and its Chairman Klaus Schwab, has called for religious scriptures to be "rewritten" by artificial intelligence (A.I.) to create a globalized "new Bible".
According to Harari, using A.I. to replace scriptures will create unified "religions that are actually correct."
Harari believes the power of A.I. can be used to transform spirituality into a globalist vision of "equity" and inclusion.
In an interview with journalist Pedro Pinto, Harari said that A.I. is “the first technology ever that can create new ideas.”
“You know, the printing press, radio, television, they broadcast, they spread ideas created by the human brain, the human mind. They cannot create a new idea. You know, [Johannes] Gutenberg printed the Bible in the middle of the 15th century; the printing press printed as many copies of the Bible as Gutenberg instructed it, but it did not create a single new page,” the WEF official said.
He also noted that Gutenberg had no ideas of his own about the Bible: “Is it good? Is it bad? How to interpret this? How to interpret that?”
Harari reported that “A.I. can generate new ideas; it can even create a new Bible.”
“Throughout history, religions dreamt about having a book written by a superhuman intelligence, by a non-human,” he added.
Earlier, the UOJ wrote that schools in the US state of Utah were banned from studying the Bible because of "vulgarity and violence."
Read also
Zelensky tells Patriarch Bartholomew about power outage problems
The president spoke about humanitarian difficulties in Ukraine related to the energy situation.
Metropolitan Nafanail consecrates iconostasis in temporary church in Lutsk
On the feast day of St. Spyridon of Trimythous, a hierarch of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church presided over the parish’s patronal celebration.
Pat Daniel awards Pat Bartholomew with order for overcoming schism in BOC
The award was bestowed for organizing the 1998 Council, which conciliar-ly resolved the crisis caused by the schism in the Bulgarian Church.
Persecuted UOC parish in Chernivtsi celebrates its feast day
A festive divine service in honor of St. Spyridon of Trimythous was held in a parish that remains faithful to the Ukrainian Orthodox Church despite attempts to seize the church.
Bulgarian Church Primate arrives in Istanbul
The first official visit of Patriarch Daniel to the Phanar has begun.
Political expert: Declaring January 7 as Programmer’s Day resembles mockery
Kostiantyn Bondarenko commented on President Volodymyr Zelensky’s decision to designate a new professional holiday on the day when Christmas is celebrated.