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When Is It Wrong to Use A.I.?

June 6, 2026
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When Is It Wrong to Use A.I.?

Of all the reactions to Pope Leo’s manifesto on artificial intelligence, from its liberal humanist appreciators to its digital-consciousness-believing critics, one of the most notable is the disappointment of the A.I. skeptics who think the pope didn’t go nearly far enough.

Writing in Compact magazine, Princeton’s Greg Conti responds to the pope’s description of the perils of the age of artificial intelligence by asking, “Must we have such an age declared already?” Could a pope not, instead, call for “an age of resistance to A.I.?” In The Hedgehog Review, the cultural critic Anton Barba-Kay comments that approaching A.I. as a “valuable tool that requires vigilance,” in Leo’s words, is like saying that “cocaine can be a valuable drug that should be snorted with a pinch of salt.”

My own reaction to the papal intervention had something in common with these critics. I thought Leo could have gone deeper into the sheer strangeness of artificial intelligence, the nature of its challenge to human exceptionalism, the reason it breeds so many messianic impulses and apocalyptic fears.

But I do not think a papal call for massive resistance to an A.I. epoch would have been suited to the conditions of 2026. It seems both too late and too early for that message. Too late, in the sense that the technology has swept through too much of society already, building too much wealth and infrastructure, promising too many near-term benefits, implicating too many institutions, for anyone to imagine that the A.I. revolution can be (as Conti suggests) “extirpated or repressed.”

Then too early, in the sense that the nature of human beings is to react against a technology only once its harms become undeniable; we respond best to dangers made manifest, not threats hypothesized. The regulations that tamed industrialization were fitted to the abuses of the age; the movements to restrain nuclear proliferation would have looked very different absent the object lesson of Hiroshima and Nagasaki; the recent backlash against smartphone use by kids couldn’t have been ginned up in 2010.

No doubt in an ideal world the response would precede the bitter lesson. But in this world, for the humanist skeptic of A.I. no less than Skynet-fearing safety-ist, some version of the Bad Thing probably needs to be not just visible but undeniable before the world will act.

And if the humanist is Christian, like the pope, they have good reason to trust that God will allow us whatever time is necessary to tame and regulate or even extirpate the Bad Thing, rather than simply giving us over to destruction. (Unless this is the last technological temptation of all, in which case neither encyclicals nor newspaper columns will avail us much.)

This does not mean, however, that skeptics and critics just need to sit and wait for their darkest fears to be fulfilled. If you are convinced of the existential dangers of A.I., then you should favor incremental regulation and increased political awareness even if what you really desire is a sweeping moratorium. Similarly, if you fear the cultural dangers of A.I., then your goal should be to moralize in concrete terms, to identify particular uses of the technology that seem particularly shameful, to tell your readers how not to use A.I. — even if at some level you would rather damn the entire era’s pomps and works.

Writing in The Atlantic, Tyler Austin Harper argues that some secular A.I. skeptics have been drawn to religious thinkers like the pope for exactly this reason — because a secular language of harm seems inadequate to the perils A.I. creates for human beings, which are better identified by the language of sin.

If that’s the case, though, the goal of the critic should be to identify the sin directly, not merely to lament the general advance of the technology nor to make excuses for individuals caught up in disruption.

Do not offer vague laments for the fate of higher education; say that students who use A.I. to cheat are doing something gravely wrong.

Do not merely bemoan the proliferation of Claude-inflected prose; say that the novelist or essayist who outsources a chapter to A.I. has committed what should be a career-ending literary crime.

Do not merely fret, as the pope’s encyclical does, that receiving “words of advice, empathy, friendship and even love” from a chatbot can be “misleading” for “less discerning users.” Tell Catholics and other Christians that treating an A.I. bot like your girlfriend or your boyfriend is a sin.

The point of this kind of condemnation is not to prevent the great A.I. disruption. It’s to lay the foundation for whatever structures we build on the other side. The necessary contribution of the critic is not to magically persuade everyone that it’s wrong to use A.I. It’s to persuade some people, and then more people, and eventually almost everyone, that it might be wrong to use A.I. that way.

The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. We’d like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips. And here’s our email: [email protected].

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The post When Is It Wrong to Use A.I.? appeared first on New York Times.

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