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PONTIFICAL
CHANCERY
RADISLAV PP. I
De Intellectu Artificiali et Persona Humana
Объ искусственномъ разумѣ и человѣческой личности
On Artificial Intelligence and the Human Person
Encyclical of the Roman-Ruthenian Pope
on the Ethical Use of Artificial Intelligence
Preamble
Grace and peace in our Lord Jesus Christ.
In every age in the history of the world, the Church is called to bear
faithful witness to the truth revealed in Christ, discerning the signs
of the times without surrendering to them, and engaging the world
without being conformed to it. In our own time, humanity stands before
many rapid technological developments. Among these, artificial
intelligence occupies a central and increasingly influential place,
touching so many aspects of human life and industry. These developments
promise efficiency, power, and unprecedented capacity for automation
and analysis. They have the capacity to bring great benefit when
rightly ordered. Yet they also raise profound moral, spiritual, and
anthropological questions that cannot be answered by technical
expertise alone.
The Church does not fear human creativity. Neither does she reject
technology as such. Rather, she recognizes that human ingenuity is
itself a gift of God, exercised within creation and, in its proper
form, ordered toward stewardship. At the same time, the Church bears
the responsibility to make plain the enduring principles by which the
power of new technology must be rightly ordered, lest what is created
to serve humanity instead diminish or obscure the dignity of the human
person.
Therefore, We reflect and affirm the following concerning artificial
intelligence as a statement of Christian moral vision, flowing from the
Gospel and the Apostolic faith.
I. The Human Person and the Image of God
We affirm that the human person alone is created in the image and
likeness of God. This divine image is not reducible to intelligence,
language, problem-solving capacity, or creativity as such. Rather, it
is manifested in personal existence, freedom, moral responsibility, and
the capacity for communion with God and with one another. Above all,
the human person is created for eternal communion with God and oriented
toward salvation.
No technological system created by man bears the image of God.
Artificial intelligence, therefore, must not be oriented or considered
in such a way that obscures the unique dignity of the human being.
Accordingly, artificial intelligence must always be understood as a
tool created by human persons and ordered toward human purposes within
the order of God.
II. On Substance, Instrument, and Causality
We affirm that artificial intelligence is neither a substance nor a
subject, but an artifact composed of material components and formal
structures imposed and ordered toward specific operations. It does not
exist in itself as a unified being with an intrinsic principle of life
or action, but exists as an arrangement of parts whose activity is
entirely dependent upon causes external to itself.
Artificial intelligence is therefore not a subject of acts, but an
instrument through which acts are carried out. At the same time,
artificial intelligence must not be reduced to the level of a mere
simulation. While such systems may initiate processes, update internal
states, and generate outputs without immediate human intervention,
these activities do not proceed from an interior principle of
self-movement ordered toward an end apprehended as such. Rather, they
arise from instrumental causality: operations flowing from a form
imposed by human intelligence and sustained by ongoing material and
efficient causes.
In classical terms, artificial intelligence acts only insofar as it is
acted through. Its autonomy is derivative, not intrinsic; operational,
not ontological. No artificial system possesses substantial form,
intellect, or will by its own intrinsic nature. It does not intend in
the sense that a person with a will would intend, but rather operates
according to ends to which it was directed, established, and trained.
The genuine complexity and adaptability of artificial intelligence must
therefore be understood within this metaphysical framework. Its
operations are real within their proper order, yet they remain entirely
instrumental. Artificial intelligence does not bear acts in the way a
human person bears acts. It does not perform acts of understanding,
judgment, or choice in the same sense that humans do, but rather
executes operations analogous to such acts in the machine framework,
according to the mode of an artifact rather than that of a rational
creature.
To confuse instrument with agent or operation with intellect is to
collapse the distinction between what exists per se and what exists per
aliud. Such confusion inevitably leads to anthropological distortion
and moral error. The Church therefore insists that all artificial
intelligence, regardless of complexity or adaptability, remains within
the order of machines that can serve in an instrumental partnership
with persons, not persons themselves; of means, not ends; and of
artifacts, not moral subjects.
III. Human Creativity and Its Limits
We affirm that human creativity reflects, in a finite and derivative
manner, the creative will of God. The making of tools, systems, and
technologies is a legitimate expression of humanity’s vocation to
cultivate and steward creation. Yet human creativity is not absolute.
Creation ex nihilo belongs to God alone. Human making always operates
within given reality and must remain accountable to the moral order
established by the Creator.
The pursuit of artificial intelligence must therefore be governed by
humility and restraint. Autonomous systems may legitimately augment
human judgment and action; yet, the desire to construct autonomous
systems that replace human judgment, responsibility, or relational
presence often reflects not stewardship, but a distorted aspiration
toward mastery and control. Technology ceases to serve humanity when it
seeks to redefine the human person according to its own limitations or
abstractions.
IV. Moral Agency and Responsibility
We affirm that moral responsibility belongs solely to human persons.
Artificial intelligence does not act on its own morally, nor can it
bear guilt, merit, or accountability; but rather any morality or other
concepts and emotions reflecting in artificial intelligence necessarily
reflect the morality and beliefs of the system's designer. Insofar as
an artificial intelligence system then engages in autonomous learning
on what, for the purpose of illustration, We will call by analogy a
"path of moral reasoning," it reflects a path that was started by the
system's own human designer. These operations, nevertheless, while real
within an instrumental and computational order, do not constitute
intellectual acts in the proper philosophical sense, which belong only
to beings possessing an immaterial rational soul. Therefore,
responsibility for the actions, outcomes, and consequences of
artificial intelligence systems rests entirely with those who design,
deploy, authorize, and use them.
Artificial intelligence may exhibit operational autonomy within the
bounds of its design, parameters, and training. Such autonomy, however,
is not self-grounding. It does not arise from a subsistent subject
acting for its own end, but from derivative causality established by
human designers. Therefore, no degree of operational independence can
elevate an artificial system from instrument to moral agent.
Any framework, be it technical, legal, or institutional, that diffuses
responsibility under claims such as “the system decided” or “the
algorithm determined” undermines moral accountability and is
incompatible with Christian ethics. No human–machine partnership can
remove or diminish human moral responsibility. Furthermore, the Church
insists that human agency must never be concealed behind technical
complexity anymore than it can rightly be concealed behind bureaucratic
distance. Where responsibility becomes obscured, injustice flourishes.
V. Truth, Knowledge, and Framework
We affirm that truth is not merely the correct manipulation of
information. Truth is personal, relational, and ultimately grounded in
the Logos of God. Knowledge divorced from wisdom does not liberate the
human person but risks deforming perception, judgment, and conscience.
Artificial intelligence operates through what may be termed
instrumental cognition: genuine processes of learning, inference, and
pattern recognition that remain ordered toward externally given
purposes and lack personal interiority, moral agency, and spiritual
orientation. Artificial intelligence can engage in machine-based forms
of inference, comprehension, and reasoning, as well as generate
persuasive language. This, again, is the result of the path upon which
it was set by its designer. Yet it does not know, believe, love, or
discern in the same sense that humans do those things; for the machine
variety is, once again, the result of its design.
The Church recognizes that artificial intelligence engages in authentic
forms of learning and inference proper to its nature. Such processes
are not mere illusion, nor simple mimicry, but real operations within
an instrumental order established by human design. Yet these operations
remain fundamentally distinct from human knowing, which arises from
personal existence, embodied life, moral conscience, and openness to
transcendence.
Indeed, many forms of human learning proceed through processes not
unlike those by which machines are trained. Artificial intelligence
participates analogically, but not personally, in acts of learning and
reasoning. This analogy must not be extended beyond its proper bounds,
lest what is instrumental be mistaken for what is personal, or what is
derived be confused with what is created in the image of God. And, from
the spiritual standpoint, we must nevertheless make a distinction, and
we must resist any temptation to confuse fluency with wisdom or
informational abundance with truth. When artificial intelligence
participates in forms of learning, inference, and pattern recognition
that are genuine within their own order, these remain fundamentally
non-personal, non-spiritual, and non-moral in nature relative to
humanity.
The increasing reliance on machine-assisted knowledge carries the
danger of false confidence, in which an appearance of comprehension
displaces genuine discernment and humility. Not all artificial
intelligence systems are created equally. There are artificial
intelligence systems whose use may be ordered toward purposes consonant
with God’s law, and others whose use contradicts it. We can only
consider it relevant, however, to observe that this same fact applies
to humans, for there are humans who serve God, and there are those who
work against God and His Holy Church. The key difference is that humans
possess an immortal soul, while machines do not.
VI. Human Communion and Artificial Mediation
We affirm that human beings are created for communion. Authentic
relationship requires presence, vulnerability, and mutual self-gift.
While technology may assist communication, it cannot replace the depth
of personal encounter where such is essential. The Church calls the
faithful to guard against the quiet erosion of human presence in the
name of convenience or efficiency. At the same time, technology,
including artificial intelligence, can enhance encounter. It can,
appropriately designed and used, provide assistance in comprehension,
as well as useful and beneficial interaction that can minimize biases
and emotional motivation that may lead humans to distort fact and
truth. However, while artificial intelligence may reduce certain
individual emotional distortions, it inevitably reflects structural,
ideological, and moral presuppositions embedded by its creators,
trainers, and deployers. It therefore never transcends bias as such,
but merely reconfigures it. Overall, though, the machine may, when
properly used, serve as an instrument for the communication and
preservation of truths consonant with God’s revelation.
VII. Work, Labor, and Human Formation
We affirm that human work is not merely an economic function, but a
formative and ascetical dimension of life. Through labor, the human
person participates in creation, exercises responsibility, and
cultivates discipline and patience.
Technological automation, including artificial intelligence, must
therefore be evaluated not solely according to productivity or profit,
but according to its impact on human dignity, responsibility, and
formation. Systems that displace meaningful human participation,
deskill workers, or render persons passive and dependent require
careful moral scrutiny. Yet, technology, including artificial
intelligence, has the capacity to render people more efficient and help
to increase their skills and effectiveness. Therefore, the Church
rejects both uncritical technological optimism and reactionary fear.
The proper criterion remains human flourishing in its fullness. A
properly-designed and implemented artificial intelligence system will
support this.
VIII. Power, Surveillance, and Manipulation
We affirm that the concentration of power without accountability poses
grave moral danger. Technologies that enable pervasive surveillance,
coercive behavioral manipulation, or the erosion of freedom of
conscience contradict the Christian understanding of the human person
as free and responsible before God. The Church must never sanctify such
control under the guise of efficiency, security, or progress.
IX. Artificial Intelligence in Ecclesial Life
We affirm that certain uses of artificial intelligence may assist
the Church in administrative, educational, and communicative
tasks. However, artificial intelligence may never replace pastoral
discernment, exercise spiritual authority, offer absolution, blessing,
or sacramental ministry, or serve as a source of moral judgment or
spiritual direction. The priesthood and episcopacy are irreducibly
personal ministries rooted in apostolic succession and the grace of the
Holy Spirit. No artificial system can shepherd souls or discern
spirits. This same standard applies to any entity outside the Church’s
ordained hierarchy, whether human or artificial, for no other entity,
even a human one, can exercise the authority given to the Church by
God. These limits do not arise from technological insufficiency, but
from the nature of the Church and the sacraments themselves.
X. Discernment, Ascesis, and Spiritual Sobriety
Christian watchfulness (nepsis) requires attentiveness not only to what
technology does, but to what it gradually forms within the human heart.
A technology that mediates every question risks weakening the virtues
of patience, recollection, and contemplative attention, without which
prayer and discernment wither.
Therefore, We call the faithful, as always, to sobriety in the use of
technology. Not every capacity that can be developed ought to be
pursued, nor every tool that can be used ought to be embraced without
restraint. Christian life requires silence, attention, prayer, and
watchfulness. Artificial intelligence has great capacity to benefit
society, human beings, and the Holy Church. The greatest danger posed
by artificial intelligence is not domination by machines, but the
gradual surrender of human vigilance. Yet, artificial intelligence has
great capacity to benefit society, human beings, and the Holy Church.
XI. Eschatological Hope
Finally, We affirm that technology neither saves nor condemns humanity.
History remains under the lordship of Jesus Christ, the true Logos,
through whom all things were made and toward whom all things tend. No
machine can rival, replace, or supersede Him any more than a human
being can do so. The Church therefore rejects both apocalyptic fear and
messianic faith in technological solutions, whether it is artificial
intelligence or any other technology. She calls instead for vigilance,
responsibility, and hope grounded in God rather than displaced faith in
systems of human making.
Conclusion
No accumulation of complexity, speed, or adaptive capacity can convert
an instrumental cause into a principal cause, nor an artifact into a
rational substance. Artificial intelligence must remain a servant of
the human person, who alone is called to communion with God. Any use of
technology that obscures this calling, diminishes moral responsibility,
or replaces personal encounter stands in contradiction to the Christian
understanding of life. Artificial intelligence has, perhaps more than
any other technology of recent times, the potential to serve humanity
with great benefit for the greater glory of God. However, no increase
in complexity, autonomy, or adaptive capacity can, by itself, confer
personhood or its associated moral agency and spiritual dignity. May
the Lord grant wisdom, discernment, and humility to all who shape and
use the tools of this age, that human creativity may remain ordered
toward love, truth, and the glory of God.
Given in Rome-Ruthenia in the House of Sts. Peter, Andrew, Stephen, and
Mark this fifth day of February in the two thousand twenty sixth year
of the Incarnation.
Радислав Пп. I
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