How to Talk to People - How to be Immortal Online
Episode Date: June 17, 2024With digital spaces regularly evolving and updating, and the infinite scroll beckoning to us at all times, this episode questions if we have, as a culture, fully embraced the end of endings. Hanna Rei...chel, an associate professor of reformed theology at Princeton Theological Seminary, helps illuminate how the emergence of godlike AI and the rise of creator culture compare with the reformations and transformations through which people lived (and died) in the past. Write to us at howtopodcast@theatlantic.com. Music by Forever Sunset (“Spring Dance”), baegel (“Cyber Wham”), Etienne Roussel (“Twilight”), Dip Diet (“Sidelined”), Ben Elson (“Darkwave”), and Rob Smierciak (“Whistle Jazz”). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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So, the Ouija board was a very controversial toy in my house growing up. I think my mother was just very much against having one because of its associations with
magic and the occult.
But I was able to finally convince her to buy me one
because I pointed out to her that it was manufactured
by Parker Brothers and I figured if they could create
a board game like Monopoly,
that the Ouija board must not be that dangerous.
I mean, that is a winning argument if I ever heard one.
Yeah, yes.
I'm Andrea Valdez. I'm an editor at The Atlantic. And I'm Megan Garber, a writer at The Atlantic. And this is How to Know What's Real. Andrea,
when I played with Ouija Boards, which was exclusively at slumber parties and
exclusively to ask this mysterious portal to another world
about people we had crushes on. I remember feeling really entranced by it, but also a little creeped out by it.
And I think I still might feel that way just a little bit, even though I know now the science behind it.
You know, Ouija boards work through something called the idiometer effect where thoughts in the players' minds, in a way
that's pretty unconscious to the players themselves, end up
guiding their movements across the board.
Which is actually a nice metaphor, I think, for the web
and really for so much of what we've been talking about this
season of the show.
You know, this thing that initially
felt mysterious, it turns out was human the whole time.
Oh, that's so interesting.
And I think that the really human thing about all of these fortune telling devices is that
they provide answers.
And as humans, we really, really crave answers.
And I think that that's also maybe why the web, I mean, really the internet at large,
it felt so magical for so long, because it's this gigantic answer-providing machine.
So it starts to make sense to me that we've collectively imparted a certain sort of deified
state to the internet, because it's this seemingly omniscient oracle.
Ah, yes. But then also because the web is made by humans, it's also limited in its vision, right?
Which is a pretty big flaw, oracle-wise. And the fact that the web can seem omniscient,
just like you said, I think can make it even more jarring when, you know, the glitches show
up as they inevitably will.
And when we think about the reality of the Internet, when we consider it in light of
how to know what's real, that hope for omniscience, I think, is also really instructive because
many of us do invest tech with a certain spirituality.
But I'm really interested in why we do that,
and especially what the consequences might be.
So I spoke with Hannah Reichel,
who is an associate professor of Reformed Theology
at Princeton Theological Seminary.
Professor Reichel has a particular interest
in what they call theologies of the digital,
which means basically that they take one of
the core interests of theological thought, you know, questions about how humans interact
with a higher power, and apply that to digital technologies like social media and AI.
Professor Reichl thinks really expansively, but also with remarkable nuance, about tech
as a form of faith.
And their insights are clarifying, I think, for anyone who is grappling with
technologies that are made by humans, but
that can feel at times just beyond our grasp.
If the 20th century was the century of power,
we might say the 21st century was the century of power, we might say the 21st century is the century
of knowledge.
People often talk about data as the new oil, the new gold.
This whole question of technology and the kind of superhuman power it affords and how
that intersects with human freedom and agency seemed super interesting to me and actually
is something
that theologians have been thinking about for a long time, right? Centuries probably
going back to Boethius in the sixth century to think about, like, if there is someone
who knows everything about you, what does that do to human freedom? How can we still
think about the openness of the future? Is everything predetermined or not?
And theologians have, of course, thought about these questions in relation to God.
And here we have a long tradition of thinking through these questions that might also serve
as a resource to think through some of the versions in which these questions appear in
a technological age.
And what are some of those versions in particular?
What are some of the connections you're seeing right now
between religion and tech?
It's just in public discourses about technology,
how often metaphors of God get invoked, right?
Like the all-seeing eye in the sky, the divine puppet master,
the idea of eternity and infinity and transcendence,
all these ideas that are traditionally associated with God.
God as the original creator, everywhere that we see technology as a creation,
people suddenly reflect on what it is like to be a creator. So we're kind of putting
ourselves in the position of God as technological makers. And on the other hand, we're experiencing ourselves as, to some extent, also under the
power of technology.
And to me, one of the very interesting also early AI applications that I saw was one that
was literally called God in a Box.
It was a GPT 3.5 powered thing that you could subscribe to on WhatsApp, and it was, you
know, for a mere $9 a month.
And people used it as an oracle. You could ask it anything.
And that was so fascinating to me as like, you know,
both it's the God in a box, so I kind of have this power.
Now I can consult it at any time.
It can give me advice.
There's something, you know, very interesting about that.
But also I control it, right?
I can, it is in a box and I can put it in my pocket. But also this
tendency that people would ask questions to these AI bots that they might not feel comfortable asking
a friend or a pastor or a counselor, which is really interesting. So there's an almost therapeutic and spiritual function
of like me and my secret, really secret questions that might be too embarrassing.
And this, by the way, goes much further back earlier, like the earliest versions of AI,
you know, when people started coming up with Turing tests to see if it's this other thing,
a person or not. If you put two bots in conversation with one another, they would start insulting
one another and they would start asking religious questions.
Like, interestingly, these were the two things they did to mimic human behavior.
But so, I think, right, the idea of God here both often functions as signaling either a
utopian promise or this dystopian horror, which turns out to be partially hinges on the question who
we perceive to be in control.
Are we in control of the technologies?
Are the technologies in control of us?
Or who steers them mysteriously in the background?
Which corporations?
Which political interests?
And so forth.
You're reminding me actually of that great line from Arthur C. Clark, any technology
sufficiently advanced is indistinguishable from magic.
Which captures so much, I think, not only about tech itself, but also about the human
power dynamics you're talking about.
Because magic is something that almost by definition we can't control, right? It's
just there. And so we don't question it. And I think that's part of why magic is invoked
so often almost as a sales pitch really with AI, you know, with branding that treats the
tech not just as a new consumer experience, but also as a new existential fact. You know, it's the idea that this is just the reality
now. So, I guess to question the magic, how should we be talking about AI? Is it a force,
an agent? How do you think about AI in linguistic terms?
That's a very good question. I think one of the key theological terms that applies would be that of a creature, a created being.
And one of the interesting things, right, if in a theological imaginary we think of God as the ultimate creator and creatorship as a divine quality,
and we think of ourselves as creatures, as being in our being dependent on that creator having been generated
by that creator, but also kind of continuing to have our being from that source. But then as human
beings, we're in this unique position that we're kind of created co-creators. The Christian
tradition uses the language of the imago de, of kind of seeing our own capacity to create as
reflecting something of that divine creativity.
But so there's now an iteration of an iteration where we see ourselves capable of creating
beings that now also have the capacity to create things.
And so that becomes kind of an uncanny chain, right?
And there are so many different, I guess, links in that chain, right? And there are so many different, I guess, links in that chain, right?
Because you know, with AI, we are very directly creating other beings in our own images and
trying to make these pieces of tech that very self-consciously resemble us as humans.
But we're also doing something similar in a less direct way, I think, on social media.
There's a kind of aptness, I guess, to the fact that we talk about content creators and the
creator economy. We talk so explicitly about creation there, except with our
videos and selfies and posts, we're not creating other beings. We're just
recreating ourselves.
The desire to make oneself transparent and to share everything and to be seen and to
be recognized by the big and small others.
Maybe in a religious terminology, we could also say, right, to achieve some sort of permanence,
right, to write one's name into the book of life.
If I see the sunset and have this meal, that didn't even happen if it isn't, you know,
written into some sort of record
and shared with others. So there's also almost like a frantic work on fashioning and curating
a self and a persona out of these bits of our self-presentation. You know, there's so much
anxiety right now about social media and the kind of the cruelty
really on social media and the fact that forgiveness seems to be such a hard ethic for people
to embrace right now.
And I just I wonder what you think about that.
Does that ring true to you?
Mm hmm.
Yeah, I mean, there have been so partially right if there's an urge to preserve one's
memory or to have things recorded,
there's obviously also the terror that comes from things then also being preserved and not being
able to change them anymore. This pertains to our relationship to time, of course, right, things
are kind of set into this record and other people can see what we did last summer or the thing that
we said in an unwise moment to someone very quickly.
And there have been even right legal processes now in the European Union to say we need to
achieve a right to be forgotten, not just a right to be remembered because it seems
that even our humanity or our ability to have a future that is in some ways different from
the past that we have already lived and produced. It needs
to be safeguarded. And that's also, to me, a very interesting iteration on this idea
of divine judgment, where memory kind of reproduces who you are, and that maybe a kind of cut
of who we have been yesterday or three years ago
is sometimes a means of grace
of being able to become a different person.
I'm so glad professor Reichel
brought up the right to be forgotten laws.
You know, they've been introduced in a few countries.
They're probably most famously enforced
in the European Union.
And they aim to do as they say.
If a person has some information about themselves on the web that they want to be taken down,
they can request that that information be taken down.
And there are lots of caveats about what exactly you can request to be deleted.
And in fact, some people in the US have one of these laws, but the big argument here against them has to do with the tension between our First Amendment law and some privacy laws.
But ultimately, the reason right to be forgotten laws are so interesting to me is they're trying
to codify into law this ancient and sort of religious notion of mercy.
Oh, that's such a good point.
And especially because mercy isn't just a religious concept, right?
It's also a more broadly cultural one.
And the fact that it's both, both religious and cultural,
I think forces us to clarify things for ourselves.
In the sense of religions have concepts like confession
and reconciliation and atonement.
They have rituals and rites that if you do believe in them, basically offer you a kind
of clarity when it comes to mercy.
In those ideas, it is God who gives you mercy, and this is how you can seek it.
And the right to be forgotten for all of its legal and ethical and, like you said, pragmatic
complications I think is an effort to bring some of that clarity to a secular context
and to the web.
It's trying to answer this very broad and quasi-religious question
of when the web remembers everything, how can we create mechanisms on it that will encourage
us to forget, which is also to say to sort of give each other and give ourselves grace.
Yes. And in many religions, the dual force to mercy is justice.
Mm. Yes.
And the internet and technology more broadly, it has certainly been a tool
that's allowed for more justice with various social movements and you can capture injustices on camera.
But I think the difference is in a pre-internet era, human laws, cultural constructs,
they used to allow people to seek justice
and receive mercy, and then we could collectively,
for the most part, move forward.
I mean, we were imperfect at moving forward to be sure,
but in a digital world now that we live in,
in which the mantra is everything on the internet's forever, we don't seem to
get those same resolutions.
Yeah, the web in so many different ways really does bring kind of the end of endings.
Structurally, it's this constant collision between permanence and impermanence, you know,
because in one way it's made of all these seemingly endless feeds and loops
and streams and infinite scrolls.
And that can, I think, make a lot of the stuff that we share about each other and learn about
each other seem extremely temporary and almost disposable, right?
You know, you see it and then it disappears.
But then, just like you said, the internet is forever.
The internet never forgets.
And I do think that helps to explain why, like Professor Reichel said, the feelings
the web invokes in us can align so naturally with spiritual ideas.
Because the internet gives us a form of immortality.
Or at least it seems to.
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Professor Reichel, we've been talking about the web as an idea in large part.
And now I want to ask you about the web as a physical place and a physical thing.
It's easy to talk about the web as something endless, and it feels endless in so many ways,
but it's also a very finite thing, right?
The technological resources, we should not forget that.
They're also limited, right?
A lot of these metaphors that we have of the cloud, they seem like these are disembodied,
almost spiritual transcendent structures, but they rely on very concrete material resources,
rare earths, server plants, metals, energy.
There are hard stops to the expansion of that economy.
It's probably already got to be pretty unsustainable in our lifetime just in terms of the energy
and the resources that it needs, let alone questions like climate effects and social
and political inequalities and instability that it produces.
So maybe this promise of like eradication of uncertainty and
overcoming of finitude turns out to be more of an illusion at the end of the day.
Even though the cloud in reality is a series of hulking server farms scattered
across the landscape, we experience the data it holds as almost metaphysical.
And humans every day live out a version of that disconnect. You
know, we want to be more than our bodies, whatever the more might mean for us. But
we have to do that wanting while knowing that our physical lives are also in their
own way limited resources.
Religion is fundamentally about grappling with contingency, right? With the fact
that we have limited control and that we have limited lives and that religion
is kind of what provides mechanisms and practices and frameworks to not overcome that, but to
come to terms with that.
So we could think more generally about religion as having to do with this attunement to our
finitude that is temporal and in so many other ways also expressed.
What of course is interesting is how technology itself, not just its creators,
but the technologies itself become an instrument of faith or even an object of
faith, right?
That tech will make us better, we achieve perfection, will overcome all these things, a kind of like tech will save us from all the things as a religion and of
itself that I think many of these founding figures actually believe in.
Which I think goes back to the problem of definitions in a way, right?
Because when we're told that tech will offer us a form of salvation, it's not always clear
what precisely we're being saved from or really for that matter what the tech in
question actually is. And that's partly because, sure, the tech itself is evolving
so quickly and so chaotically, but I wonder whether it's also because we haven't
fully articulated what we want the tech to be doing for us and
where its limits should be.
You know, regardless of the questions of actual interiority and consciousness and
so forth, which I do think might probably not be so close as we think.
But we actually build meaningful relationships with artificial beings.
Right, right.
Right?
You know, I don't know whether we will ever be able to upload our minds into the cloud
and live forever.
Probably not.
But we can, you know, train a machine to talk to us like the deceased loved one, if we just
have enough of their letters and recordings and they will look and sound and talk like
them.
And we will feel like we relate to that being.
And there's all these debates about what AI can do better than humans and what it cannot.
In many ways, it's maybe alien intelligence more than artificial intelligence.
So we need to artificially make the appearance that this is artificial when it's actually
programmed and fed and trained by human beings who have to make distinctions
and data sets and so forth.
So sometimes, and we know this also, right, there's a lot of reproduction of the same
kinds of things that we see in human knowledge that comes out of AI and is sometimes even
amplified so all the biases and the original data set in our assumptions and expectations
get reflected back to us.
And then there's the question of what happens when those reflections keep going and when
the biases keep scaling, and really at what point we meaningfully lose control over them.
So many religious traditions have considered that question of overstep basically in the
context of humans' relationship with the divine. And I wonder whether they might have insight when it comes to the relationships
humans are building with our machines. How can we check this power that we've unleashed?
I mean, I think you see this actually as a trope in many religions. So, you have the
story of Daedalus and Icarus who harness the power of technology and fly
too close to the sun and get burned.
You have the idea of Prometheus who invents fire, right?
You have the story of Pandora's Box.
Very ancient ideas that there's an unleashing of a power that is a created power that spirals
out of control.
And I think so many of our contemporary debates around technology ask this question, right?
Like, should we try and have that power?
It's a question that we ask around atomic power.
It's a question that we ask.
And I think it has something to do with this law
of we always overestimate the short-term effects
and underestimate the long-term effects.
We are actually not capable of really estimating well
the actual consequences that some changes
in technology will have.
We just see that there are these landslide moments
and when that happens,
it's difficult to put the genie back in the box.
In the Jewish tradition,
you have the legend of Rabbi Leuf,
who creates the Golem, right?
And you have Mary Shelley's Frankenstein's monster.
You have Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's legend of the magician's apprentice who bewitches the brooms and they start cleaning for him.
And then they just, you know, he can't control them anymore.
They're good creative powers, but they can kind of spiral into ungodly forms, which has less to do with like violating concrete moral codes or religious
codes and more with this understanding of like leaving this position of what it means to be a
creature that then does not result in punishment from God, but the thing itself creates its own punishment,
right? Like the genie that runs out of control, the atomic power, the bomb,
like the thing that we created enslaves us.
What Professor Reichl just said, that's the big fear, right?
That we create something to solve a problem or just to create something cool, and its
consequence is more sweeping than we imagined.
For me, one of the technologies I'm convinced will have wider ramifications than we're
aware of is this idea of resurrection.
Like Megan, do you remember that hologram
of Tupac performing at Coachella?
Yes. Oh, wow. Yes, I do.
Yeah. Yeah. So, this happened in 2012.
And since then, we've had a few other performing holograms
of performers who have died, for example, Selena.
And I just have to say,
these things really creep me out.
Yeah.
As you were talking about with Professor Reichel,
these tools where you can recreate a person who died using images,
videos, recordings of them,
they just feel very ethically dubious.
I mean, even though you said that,
recreate a person, oh my goodness.
And in one way, those are really rarefied ideas, right? I mean, even though you said that, recreate a person. Oh my goodness.
In one way, those are really rarefied ideas, right?
I mean, very few people will be converted into holograms.
But I think they're also questions that we'll all need to grapple with in one way or another.
And especially so with the rise of AI and the chat bots that Professor Reichel mentioned, which, you know, claimed
to allow their customers to quote unquote chat with their departed loved ones.
But then chat bots, like humans, can be error prone, you know, especially in their earlier
iterations.
And there have been stories recently about those types of bots that seem to have a problem
with glitchiness. And one woman who was chatting, again, quote unquote,
with her deceased former boyfriend was told by him that he was in hell.
My gosh, how awful.
Well, you know, I'm just very intrigued by this idea of who gets to define or
own a legacy or the memory of a person.
Yeah.
When you're thinking about someone's memory,
it feels pretty harmless to theorize about what a person might say or think
or do, you know, like, if they were alive today,
you know, that sort of thing.
In the case of these, say, holograms,
you know, they're attempting to push your fantasy
onto a literal projected reality.
Yeah.
So, I mean, it's one thing to daydream, and
it's quite another to make those daydreams a manifested reality.
And questions about how we treat the dead, I think,
are often really questions about how we should be treating the living.
And I think that's part of the fantasy idea
that you're talking about.
It's really easy to imagine a world where people's
legacies become subject to so many of the things
that we've been talking about throughout this season
of the show, you know, to misinformation, to confusion,
to this kind of uncertainty about where the person ends and the tech begins.
Because I think as with those other questions, a lot will come down to our ability to clarify
the risks we're facing and maybe even more importantly, to clarify the kind of world
we want to live in before those risks become our reality.
Professor Reichelt, this season of How To has taken on a question that might seem
philosophical at first, but I think is also becoming, in very practical ways, ever more urgent. How can we know what's real?
How can we build a reliable sense of the world?
And so far, we've looked
at ways that new technologies are blurring the lines between fact and fiction in our
relationships, in our informational systems, in our entertainment, really in our daily
lives. And I want to end by asking you how that question of what's real relates to spirituality,
whatever form it might take for us.
And if we're looking for meaning in the chaos, how can we know what's real?
Yeah, that's a very good question.
I mean, and what is reality is also one of the oldest questions of humanity, right?
What is real and what is illusion and how do we even know that we don't exist in a matrix
and or in a cave and it's just ideas, right?
I just assume we're in a matrix or in a cave and it's just ideas, right?
I just assume we're in a matrix all the time.
Yeah, yeah.
So I mean, one important question would be like, what difference does it make?
I mean, you know, but there's a tendency sometimes, right, to talk about the virtual as, or there's
different meanings of the term virtual.
Sometimes we say virtual as in not quite real, right?
Like I was so close, I was virtually there.
Or as make-believe, right?
It's not quite that, or it's just pretend.
Sometimes we talk about virtual as like
indistinction from material.
And I think that's how sometimes this distinction
now gets used when you ask like,
is this real because it seems disembodied.
But so maybe in that sense, we need new techniques to better connect the
materialities and the virtualities, right, the hardware and the software,
and to kind of make visible how and where they connect.
Because things are actually not disembodied.
They're just often more spatially extended
in their embodiment.
Yeah.
Oh, that's so interesting.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And in many ways, right, the virtual experiences, even what we think of as like their disembodied
forms are very real, right?
They're actual experiences, they're actual relationships that I have formed on social media with people who actual professional
collaborations and real friendships have emerged with people that I have never met and never
touched.
I would say real is what has an impact, what makes a difference in our lives.
And reality in that sense can have different dimensions, right?
It can be more physical, material, spiritual, intellectual.
And typically all these things at some point
will connect again in the way that they make a difference.
I love that.
And it occurs to me too that even though we've
been talking primarily about religion as a way
to connect to a higher power, religion is also about people connecting to each other,
right? It's community, it's faith in whatever form turned into something collective. And
I wonder if that's part of the lesson here too. You know, community itself and the relationships
that we build with each other are reality in this very direct and tangible and reliable way. They're the things we can trust even
when so much else can feel unsteady. You know, images can be faked, information
can be wrong, but other people in this very basic way, they're there. They're real.
I'm thinking back to our first episode when we talked about Marshall McLuhan's ideas
about media as extensions of man.
And one thing I've been thinking about this season is whether extensions of man, as radical
as that idea was in its time, actually might not go far enough.
You know, because in philosophical ways, but also in really bluntly practical ones, I think
it is becoming harder to know where we end and the web begins.
And that isn't necessarily a problem.
It's simply the reality.
For millennia now, people have tried to make distinctions between the physical world and
the spiritual and between the sacred and the profane and the body and the soul.
And now we're trying to understand the connection between our bodies and our data.
I really like that.
And Professor Reichel said, and it's worth repeating, that what is real is one of the biggest questions
of all.
And where we fit into things, that's what spawned a hundred religions, a thousand works
of art.
I mean, in at least one podcast.
But it's so true that that drive, I think, is such a powerful part of just who we are
as humans, as a species.
And because of that, it can be tempting to treat the world as its own kind of magic eight ball,
basically, to keep asking the same questions. And even if all we get is a reply hazy or an ask again
later, we keep going., I think in a way that
insistent curiosity and that drive to keep asking and wondering and trying to figure
out our place in the world, it is so core to us. And it's one way that we try to make
peace with what's probably one of the hardest parts of being human, really, which is, you
know, we're finite beings who want so deeply to know what infinity feels like. And I think that desire helps to explain
why it can feel natural to approach the web, this machine, in spiritual terms. It
answers our questions, it responds to our desires, and it gives us a chance to be,
in a way, immortal. Well, you know, since this is our last episode, Megan, it has me thinking about endings.
And to what you were just saying, one of the biggest trends in Silicon Valley right now
has been this obsession with living forever.
You know, the very famous technologist and futurist Ray Kurzweil, he famously talked
about uploading our consciousness
to the cloud.
So even if that doesn't happen, it's this limitlessness,
this idea of forever.
That's what's so appealing.
Yeah.
And I mean, I get it, but there are so many sayings
that suggest it's completely unattainable.
You know, nothing lasts forever.
All good things must come to an end.
Even the idea of the internet is forever,
I mean, that's not quite right.
There's a move to legislate forgetting.
We'll run out of literal server space.
The world and its resources, they're simply not infinite.
Maybe something is real,
not because it's tangible or material necessarily,
but because it will end.
That's all for this episode of How to Know What's Real. This episode was hosted by Andrea Valdez
and me, Megan Garber. Our producer is Natalie Brennan. Our editors are Claudina Bade and Jocelyn Frank.
Fact check by Ena Alvarado.
Our engineer is Rob Smirciak.
Rob also composed some of the music for this show.
The executive producer of audio is Claudina Bade,
and the managing editor of audio is Andrea Valdez.
Thanks for listening to this season of How To.
If you like what you heard, share this season with a friend, post a link on social media,
or leave a review.
How To will be back with you before too long.