What are chatbots doing to us? Personhood in an age of AI

What's lost when we become ensnared in relationships with non-human beings

AI-driven chatbots are becoming a major industry, with hundreds of millions of people spending hours every day talking to non-human personas. They can be friends, therapists, lovers, work colleagues or fantastical invented characters. Or even an uncanny replica of an actual loved who has died. But should we be worried about the rise of AI chatbots? What does it tell us about human intelligence and personality that it is becoming possible for computers to so accurately mimic us? What might be lost by getting enmeshed in relationships of various kinds with a non-human artificial personality, rather than other embodied, image-bearing human beings?

I gave the 2024 John Stott London Lecture on this topic, and go in more detail into some of the ideas we discuss in this episode here.

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