Monday, June 15, 2026

Who or what is a person?

Last week, posting on AI, I noted a post by Ilia Delio "a Franciscan sister, teacher and writer in an unfinished universe", titled "Are we defending a corpse? Magnifica Humanitas and the Person we no longer are".

Delio's dissection of Magnifica Humanitas is as cutting as any an anatomist might make during an autopsy because she strikes at one of its core concepts, the human person. Thus:

"The encyclical presents AI as the problem. But AI is not the problem. The problem is the human person — specifically, the philosophical and theological categories through which we have defined human personhood, categories that are now so rigid, so fixed, and so incompatible with our actual understanding of reality that they are cracking under the pressure of a world they were never built to describe. By insisting on a traditional Catholic conception of the person as the operative framework for global AI governance, Leo is not defending humanity. He is defending a portrait of humanity that no longer resembles the living thing."

Wow! That is sharp and the next paragraph sharpens up the challenge further:

"The personhood that Magnifica Humanitas seeks to protect is not a generic one. It is a specific philosophical product — the Thomistic synthesis of Aristotelian metaphysics and Christian theology, in which the human person is defined by a rational soul as substantial form, possessing intrinsic dignity derived from being made imago Dei. This is a powerful and coherent framework on its own terms. But its terms are not the terms of the world we now inhabit."

The pointedness of this critque is brought out at the end of the next paragraph which notes consequential problems (if Delio is correct) for Catholic social teaching, based, as it is, on a or the Catholic conception of personhood:

"Everything that follows in Catholic social teaching, including its strong positions on human rights, the inviolability of conscience, and the dignity of labor, flows from this foundational essentialism."

Why does Delio draw out the inherent problem with an Aristotelian/Thomistic definition of personhood? Evolution is the problem/challenge for such thinking and the opportunity for a new conception of the human person:

"Evolution does not offer a different answer to the same question. It dissolves the question. There is no moment in the four-billion-year history of biological life at which “the person” arrived. There is a continuous process of increasing complexity, sociality, and reflective capacity that stretches from the first self-replicating molecules to the beings who are now building machines that think. To insert a substantial form into this process — to say that at some point the rational soul was infused into an animal and personhood was born — is not to reconcile theology with science. It is to use science as scaffolding and then remove it once the theological conclusion is in place."

Delio compliments Teilhard de Chardin and Karl Rahner as 20th century Catholic theologians who permitted evolution to influence their theology of personhood so that they offered:

"genuine attempts to think personhood as a process rather than a given. But neither was permitted to follow the logic all the way, because the logic leads somewhere the tradition cannot go: to the admission that personhood is not a kind of being but a degree of becoming, and that its boundaries are therefore constitutively fuzzy, constitutively relational, and constitutively open. This admission would not merely complicate Catholic anthropology. It would transform it beyond recognition."

Then follows a caustic sledge of Magnifica Humanitas:

"Magnifica Humanitas does not take this step. It acknowledges modern science in the way that a building might acknowledge the weather — by noting its existence, perhaps making some adjustments around the edges, but not allowing it to touch the foundations."

We might say (if following Delio) that Magnifica Humanitas deserves this caustic remark because it fails to understand the effect of evolution as a cause of who we, in fact are, as humanity.

Delio then draws out the challenge which Leo both faces, and makes a good but not decisive response to, about how the dialogue on AI and human personhood he seeks Magnifica Humanitas to be part of fits with the absoluteness of his Thomistic suppositions:

"Leo is aware of this problem. He spends nearly half of Magnifica Humanitas recounting the history of Catholic social teaching precisely in order to forestall the objection that this is a form of institutional imperialism dressed in the language of universal values. The Church, he insists, does not impose but accompanies; it does not dictate but offers the treasury of its tradition to a pluralistic world in a spirit of dialogue.

The problem is that the structure of the encyclical’s argument contradicts this self-presentation. You cannot simultaneously hold that there is one correct account of personhood — derived from a specific metaphysical and theological tradition — and that you are merely offering a perspective in a plural conversation. The insistence on universality and the practice of dialogue are not compatible moves in this context. They require each other’s cancellation."

What, then, might be an acceptable way forward for Delio? She refers to Raimon Panikkar approvingly:

"The philosopher Raimon Panikkar, whose career was devoted to exactly this problem, developed the concept of diatopical hermeneutics as a corrective. Genuine cross-cultural dialogue about foundational concepts like personhood, dignity, and rights must begin, Panikkar argued, from the recognition that each tradition’s starting points are topoi — particular places in conceptual space — and not universals that transcend culture and history. A Buddhist understanding of selfhood, a Confucian understanding of relational personhood, an Indigenous understanding of the human as embedded in a web of cosmic obligations — these are not deficient versions of the Thomistic account, waiting to be corrected by the encyclical’s superior metaphysics. They are different starting points, each of which has developed internally coherent implications.

To anchor global AI governance in one tradition’s account of personhood is not to protect humanity. It is to perform a kind of epistemic colonialism, even when performed with the gentlest of intentions."

Let's come back to these two paragraphs shortly. Delio then looks at how we understand intelligence, and finds there to be less difference between artificial intelligence and human intelligence than Magnifica Humanitas supposes. I pass by the details of that section of her critique. She then writes:

"This experiential, participatory, feedback-driven model of knowledge is far more consonant with what we now understand about cognition, about ecology, about the dynamics of complex systems, and — most urgently — about the relationship between human intelligence and artificial intelligence, than anything the Thomistic tradition can offer. And it points toward a genuinely new understanding of personhood: not as a fixed essence that must be preserved, but as an ongoing process of self-organization within a web of relationships that is itself always in formation."

We are able to become clearer through such a paragraph that a person is more process than fixed entity. The following two paragraphs elucidate exactly where Delio wants theology of personhood to go and how Magnifica Humanitas fails:

"What is worth protecting is not a static human nature but the conditions for human becoming: the capacity for genuine relationship, for error-correction, for the kind of participatory knowing that Bonaventure and Morin both describe, for the experience of being embedded in a web of relationships that extends beyond the individual to include community, ecology, and — on some accounts — cosmos. The new materialisms and the emerging philosophies of panpsychism share with process theology a single crucial insight: primacy belongs not to the isolated substance but to the relationship. The human is not a monad that happens to interact with other monads. The human is constituted by its relationships, and it becomes more fully itself as those relationships deepen and diversify.

AI is one of those relationships now. It is not an alien force threatening a pre-given human essence from outside. It is a new node in the network of relationships through which humanity is continuing to constitute itself. The question is not whether to resist it but how to remain in a genuinely adaptive, feedback-driven, error-correcting relationship with it — how to ensure that the purposes built into it are, in Wiener’s phrase, the purposes we really desire."

If, following the cited paragraphs above you have been thinking, the theological approach here is "process theology", then it is indeed so, "the emerging philosophies of panpsychism share with process theology a single crucial insight: primacy belongs not to the isolated substance but to the relationship."

Now, it is tempting to riposte to Delio's riposte at this point with an "Oh, so you're a process theologian. That means what you say is faulty and I need not engage further" line. To do so would not be fair to her insights about the relationship between evolution and personhood (there is one) and to the possibility that artificial intelligence (appropriately governed) could be friend and complement to human intelligence and thus supportive of our value as persons rather than foe of our personhood.

Further, sitting as I do within the Anglican Church in Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia, where various theologies and anthropologies jostle for attentiveness and mutually interact, I acknowledge the important challenge that Maori and Polynesian worldviews pose to some views among Pakeha which have helicoptered their way from the northern hemisphere to the Blessed Isles down under. In particular, we are consistently invited to recognise the importance of relationships in our descriptions of ourselves as human persons: what family do I belong to? Which tribe do I identify with? Who are my ancestors? On what boat or plane did they come to these shores? This is a richer conception of personhood than "I am X and these skills, experiences, attributes and personal testomony make me the amazing individual that I am."

Incidentally, a relationship-based account of the individual person will always be richer than an account of an artificial intelligence "person" who will be, at best, a set of things spread across data centres of the world.

So, there is something in what Delio says which contributes to a larger account of the human person than Magnifica Humanitas offers, but is the latter as wrong as Delio makes out?

Time does not permit me to do a similar setting out of key paragraphs in Magnifica Humanitas' argument and then a to and fro between the two with subsequent declaration of "the winner." So, something a little shorter from me, or even much shorter ...

A strength of Magnifica Humanitas' position, even if the Aristotle/Thomistic line within it is subject to critical condemnation, is that it places all human persons in the equality of being made in the image of God, thus all of intrinsic worth as human beings. This is, of course, a well founded conception in respect of the Bible itself: humankind is made in the image of God, without exception; Christ dies for all and is raised to life for all people, without exception. Jews and Greeks, slave and free, men and women: all are redeemable through Jesus Christ.

If a strength of what Delio offers via the De Chardin, Rahner, Panikkar line is a richer account of who we are as human beings, then a weakness of a more "process" oriented understanding of personhood is that it opens the door to some human beings being treated as more valuable than other human beings. We are evolved creatures, but what if an anthropological line of thought is that the X race is more evolved than the Y race? We are developed and developing persons in an ever changing world, but what if we permit that to offer a new classification of society, into the developed and under developed? (We have enough class differences to battle with without introducing more). We are relational beings and it is right and proper to give an account of ourselves which emphasises the social more than the individual, but what if this leads to a stratification in which those belonging to tribe A are more important than those belonging to tribe B? 

Slavery as an example of humanity dividing persons up into superior and inferior groups based on the perceived differences in the worth of the person is a phenomenon of history which traverses generations and eras, polytheistic and monotheistic religions, European and other cultures, the European Enlightenment and the cultures it influenced, including the United States of America and Polynesian cultures of the South Pacific, including Maori culture.

Within the Christian faith, which line of theological evaluation of the human person offers the better pathway to challenge and abolish divisive approaches to personhood such as slavery?

On that one, I am inclined to foster Magnifica Humanitas (while avoiding assigning it infallible status) rather than Delio's approach with its view that in the former, the person is some kind of theological corpse!

In saying this, I am offering an appreciation of a strength of Magnifica Humanitas and am not offering a "knockdown, take it away from further consideration" argument against what Delio offers. 

In an evolved world, so evolved that it offers artificial intelligence to be whatever we might permit it to be, whether competitor or complement to human intelligence, whether influential on our understanding of personhood (e.g. so that we shift from emphasising the human character of personhood to something broader) and so forth, we can and should engage with a dynamic rather than static understanding of who we are and how we value one another. 

Our greatest care should be - following our Lord's teaching to "love our neighbour as ourselves" and to "love one another" - that we do not consequentially de-value another human being.

In effect, we might offer back to Delio, a Riceour "second naivity" reading of the human person. Sure, "There [was] no moment in the four-billion-year history of biological life at which “the person” arrived. ... [nor should we] say that at some point the rational soul was infused into an animal and personhood was born ... [see full paragraph above]." But that is not the same as saying, looking around us, at my family and your family, at my tribe or race and your tribe or race, at the most intelligent/creative/gifted among us and at the least so, that each person we see is not a person-with-a-soul, meaning not a person to be distinguished from plants and non-human animals. Indeed, with an appropriate definition of soul, and whether or not we envisage a moment of infusion in time past, there is (and as Pope Leo and many would argue) and always will be, a distinction to be made between the human person and the personable machine.



Monday, June 8, 2026

2020s, the decade of AI flourishing, addressed in Magnifica Humanitas - and a significant ordination

First, before we get to AI, it has been an absolute privilege this weekend to participate in the ordination and installation of Susan Wallace as bishop in order to be Te Pihopa o Te Hui Amorangi ki Te Waipounamu (for overseas readers, Susan is a bishop of the Anglican Church In Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia, whose territorial/people jurisdiction is over the Maori Anglicans of the South Island/Te Waipounamu).



When it is posted I will make a link to Anglican Taonga's forthcoming report [It is here]. I managed to snap the two photos above after the service, the first of Bishop Susan with Archbishops Justin, Sione and Don - our three Archbishops, who led the service. 

The second photo is of Bishop Susan with fellow women bishops who were at the service: Archbishop Kay Goldsworthy (Perth), Bishop Waitohiariki Quayle (Te Upoko [south North Island, NZ], Archbishop Marinez Rosa dos Santos Bassotto (Bishop of the Amazon, Archbishop of Anglican Episcopal Church of Brazil), and Bishop Ana Fletcher (Wellington, NZ).

It has been a weekend in which the "grandeur of humanity" has been on display.

Now to AI and Pope Leo's Encyclical Magnifica Hunamitas. This can be read in full at this link.

Before we get to my less than magnificent thoughts, here are a few links to head to, either about the encyclical or about AI more generally:

- A Living Church article "An Anglican Reception of Magnifica Humanitas".

- A critique of Magnifica Humanitas which questions its Thomist metaphysical perspective on who the human person is. (I have a critique of this critique developing in my mind - I may come back to this in a future post).

- Edward Feser's appreciative review of MH is here.

- Some charts on the  rise and rise of AI, its capabilities and costs (though not charts about effects on power prices for households everywhere).

- A reminder that AI has profound uses as a tool in research to speed up development of medical capabilities to rid the world of that which kills us. A correspondent, for example, has pointed me in the direction of a local researcher, Dr Arthur Morley-Bunker who is exploring the role of AI in research on cancer.

There are many more links to be found on the internet.

Something which has some thoughts from me on it - a panel discussion = podcast, so there are other, better thoughts on it can be found at "Leo's letter & life". This podcast is part of Food for Faith podcasts, run by Fr John O'Connor, a Catholic priest based here in Canterbury NZ.

OK - to some of my thoughts - very briefly - and in no particular order of priority, but numbered for the sake of my rational process!

1. This document is a (pun intended) magnificent recitation, and extension of Catholic social teaching. A wonderful primer on subsidiarity, solidarity, synodality (i.e. human participation in the church), common good, the family in society, the dignity of work and so forth. In the context of the elucidation of this teaching, Pope Leo sets out his major thesis, "the grandeur (or magnificence) of humanity" means that AI must serve humanity rather than diminish or even enslave humanity.

2. The encyclical is wonderful as a document of public theology - theology engaging with, appreciating and critiquing an important issue of our day, AI, and, as well, related issues of our day, including work, war, attitudes to women, slavery (with an apology for the church's slowness to condemn slavery) and its modern forms, and truth in democracy. The world, if it ever looks to the church, looks for guidance which converts the divine word into a word for humanity. This document does that.

3. The Pope is fair. He finds good in AI (which he should, which we all should, it is a tool which enables important advances in human understanding and problem solving) and he warns against the bad in AI (it has capacity to enhance rather than diminish the gap between the world's "haves" and "have nots."

4. While AI is not the sole focus of the encyclical, it is the whole focus in the sense that the Pope keeps weaving his way back to and then out from AI as his "social theology" survey of the world connects AI to topics such as war and work.

5. Nevertheless, I think there are some weaknesses in the document, and by that I mean, areas I would like to see further work on if and when there were ever a second edition. These are:

6. There is one paragraph in which the ecological cost of AI re its power and water usage is touched on, and an appropriate plea for work on sustainability of AI is made. But I think this is the major issue for our reception of AI, not something to make passing comment on. The sheer consumption of power and water to run AI datacentres is extraordinary and it is pushing the price of power for households and industries up. It is insufficient to say that some datacentres are powered by new power sources (such as a windfarm or a solarfarm built nearby to provide power for a datacentre). If we can build more power sources, shouldn't we be doing to do make life better for people as they do the basics of life: cooking heating/cooling homes etc? It is not as though we do not have an alternative to AI. (Hint: it's called "God-give brains."). That is, there is a significant ethical issue about the draining of resources in our world to produce something we do not strictly need (that is, we have gotten by for millennia with our God-given brains). But the encyclical has no urgency about this issue (even as it rightly has urgency about other ethical issues concerning AI).

7. The encyclical has a continuing and correct set of themes about AI's development and implementation. There needs to be accountability for AI (e.g. those controlling the rise of AI, tech moguls and so forth should be accountable for the non-neutral moral character of what they are doing) and there needs to be regulation of AI, so that it is used wisely and well rather than, say, wrongly (such as controlling courses of wars) and unjustly (such as contributing to greater poverty for the poor of the world). But I do not see the encyclical as saying anything helpful about how such regulation (with consequences for accountability) will actually take place. Whatever the merits to date of global tech phenomena such as Google, Facebook and X (and I use each of these), we have seen regulation of these giants (e.g. to get them to pay more tax on their earnings) as limited and often ineffective. On what basis do we think that we will have success in regulating AI?

8. The articulation of Catholic social theology is superb and inspiring. As an Anglican I wonder where we have anything similar well-developed, globally adhered to and regularly updated? But this same superb and inspiring teaching raises questions! If social theology endorses justice for all, including women, and inspires creative momentum towards true participation for women and men in the life of the church (i.e. in modern Catholic parlance, synodality), why is the possibility of women having a full share in the ordained ministry of the church ruled out again and again, at odds with the teaching Catholics have magisterially developed on social theology?

9. Back to AI: I don't think the encyclical goes far enough in assessing the dangers of AI for humanity because AI-in-robots has capacity to generate new AI-robots (no other tool developed by humanity has had procreative abilities). Such capacity could yet dominate and eventually rid the world of the human species. Of course, in 2026, this sounds alarmist and fantastical, but is it not a question to be considered? Everything about AI is about its rapid development. No one know what capabilities AI-robots will have by 2030 let alone 2040.

10. Nevertheless I do take on board the relentless optimism of Jonah Lynch (on the Leo's Letter & Life podcast noted above): AI is for our good. Humanity has survived all threats to its existence to date. We are remarkable and adaptive! 

But, please, please, if you have time, read the encyclical. It is deep and wide, it takes us to the heart of being human, and it offers needed commentary on a fast moving phenomenon of this era which has implications for all future eras of humanity.

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

2020s, the 1930s are calling

I would like to post extensively on Magnifica Humanitas (which I am working through this week ahead of sharing in a podcast about it, organised by a local Catholic priest). Alas, time is short this week, and urgent people-oriented tasks must be concluded before week's end - which has an exciting end to it, the ordination of Archdeacon Susan Wallace as the next Pihopa o Te Hui Amorangi o Te Waipounamu, at 11 am on Saturday 6 June 2026.

So, failing that, but in the hope that perhaps next week is chronologically less challenged, I simply post the link to this article by keith Johnson, "A Strange Examination" which is a reflective account of a significant couple of moments in the 1930s history of German Christianity, with Karl Barth in a starring role, challenging the notion of God speaking through two voices, and the notion that grace perfects nature.

Although the article does not draw all implications out, the voice of Karl Barth in this article is a challenge to me (re some of my posts here), to some currents in Roman Catholic theological debate in the 20th and 21st centuries (re nature/grace), as well as to "Christian nationalism" in its various, current manifestations.

A big "hat tip" and thank you to a commenter here, Elizabeth, who supplied the link to the article in a comment to last week's post.

Onwards!