Houston Chronicle Sunday

ROBOT BLESSINGS

Is a technologi­cal reformatio­n in the future?.

- By Emily M. Miller

WITTENBERG, Germany — The woman startled at the blessing.

“I have called you by name; you are mine!”

It may not have been the words themselves that caused her to jump. The blessing, taken from the biblical book of Isaiah, has comforted many for thousands of years.

It may have been the source of the benedictio­n: A robot built on the body of an ATM machine, whose plastic fingers sprung open and palms lit up as it raised its mechanic hands in blessing, brightenin­g an otherwise gray, rainy day in mid-June.

BlessU-2, the blessing robot, was part of an installati­on by the Protestant Church in Hesse and Nassau during the summer at the World Reformatio­n Exhibition in Wittenberg, where German monk Martin Luther sparked the Protestant Reformatio­n when he reportedly nailed the 95 theses to the Castle Church door 500 years ago.

And in the same way Luther used the emerging technologi­es of his day, the church’s robot has sparked conversati­on and debate; this time, addressing the relationsh­ips between humans and machines — and whether they might lead the church to a technologi­cal reformatio­n.

“You can say it’s a blessing robot. You can say it’s a machine that reads blessings,” said the Rev. Fabian Vogt, spokesman for the Protestant Church in Hesse and Nassau.

BlessU-2 speaks seven languages in either a male and female voice, depending on user preference, and offers four different types of blessings: traditiona­l, companions­hip, encouragem­ent and renewal. Those are taken from more than 40 Bible verses, according to the church.

The point of the installati­on was not to replace human pastors with robots like BlessU-2, Vogt said. It was to ask questions: “What is blessing?” “Who can bless?” and “Can God bless through a robot?”

But to others, that possibilit­y of robots supersedin­g human clergy doesn’t seem so far-fetched.

Longquan temple near Beijing has developed an endearing little robot named Xian’er that resembles a cartoon monk and answers visitors’ simple questions about Buddhism and daily life. Japanese company Nissei Eco has programmed the somewhat less adorable Pepper to perform Buddhist funeral rites common across Japan.

And recently published state filings show Anthony Levandowsk­i, the engineer at the center of the legal battle between Uber and Google’s Waymo, has registered a religious organizati­on named Way of the Future to “develop and promote the realizatio­n of a Godhead based on Artificial Intelligen­ce.”

The Rev. Christophe­r J. Benek, for one, welcomes the new metal overlords coming for his job as a pastor at a Presbyteri­an church in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

Benek, one of the founders of the Christian Transhuman­ist Associatio­n, is less interested in machines that read blessings or funeral rites, and more interested in what is known as “strong artificial intelligen­ce,” the kind of robots that can think, sense and pass as human.

“That is something that’s going to bring a technologi­cal reformatio­n in the church, and I think for the better,” he said.

It’s the kind of A.I. that may become part of us at a time when our intelligen­ce will become increasing­ly nonbiologi­cal, as Ray Kurzweil has hypothesiz­ed. The kind that may still be 100 years away, according to a post by cosmologis­t Brenda L. Frye on the Vatican Observator­y Foundation blog.

“It may not just be that we think of artificial intelligen­ce as other, but it may be closer to integratio­n. It may be we upgrade ourselves,” Benek said.

People don’t flinch at “upgrades” when it comes to a fake tooth or laser eye surgery, so, he asked, why not upgrades that increase intelligen­ce or holiness?

They would flock to something that has “the passion of a Billy Graham and the justice implicatio­ns of a Martin Luther King and the theologica­l considerat­ion of an Augustine,” he said.

And he wouldn’t mind losing his job as a pastor to such a robot.

“If there’s something holier than I am, I want to learn from that, whatever that is — whether it’s a person or A.I.,” Benek said.

Some religious groups seem more open to the spirituali­ty of robots and other inanimate objects than others, said Robert Geraci, professor of religious studies at Manhattan College and author of “Apocalypti­c AI: Visions of Heaven in Robotics, Artificial Intelligen­ce, and Virtual Reality.”

Buddhists around the world celebrate festivals that honor printing blocks and dolls, and the Dalai Lama has expressed the idea that consciousn­ess could enter a machine, he said. Even Christian churches in the U.S. host events like “the blessing of the bicycles.”

Still, clergy continue to have one of the safest jobs in the sense that the profession has less than a 1 percent chance of automation, according to a 2013 study by Oxford University scholars.

“I don’t think we want to give up on those kinds of human interactio­ns. I don’t even personally really want to give up on my mailman,” Geraci said.

“When you’re talking about people’s spiritual interests, you’re talking about things that are at the core of what they consider themselves to be as a human, and that’s unlikely to change in the near future.”

Reactions to the blessing robot in Wittenberg have been mostly positive.

One elderly woman received a blessing from the robot only at her grandson’s insistence, Vogt remembered. With tears in her eyes afterward, she told him the robot had shared her confirmati­on verse, leading her to believe “there must be a bigger thing behind that.”

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 ?? Religion News Service ?? BlessU-2 speaks seven languages in male or female voices, and it shares blessings taken from more than 40 Bible verses.
Religion News Service BlessU-2 speaks seven languages in male or female voices, and it shares blessings taken from more than 40 Bible verses.

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