The Columbus Dispatch

Apocalypse now and then

How a religious idea became secular as well

- Erik Bleich, Charles A. Dana and Christophe­r Star

The exponentia­l growth of artificial intelligen­ce over the past year has sparked discussion­s about whether the era of human domination of our planet is drawing to a close. The most dire prediction­s claim that the machines will take over within five to 10 years.

Fears of AI are not the only things driving public concern about the end of the world. Climate change and pandemic diseases are also well-known threats. Reporting on these challenges and dubbing them a potential “apocalypse” has become common in the media – so common, in fact, that it might go unnoticed, or may simply be written off as hyperbole.

Is the use of the word “apocalypse” in the media significan­t? Our common interest in how the American public understand­s apocalypti­c threats brought us together to answer this question. One of us is a scholar of the apocalypse in the ancient world, and the other studies press coverage of contempora­ry concerns.

By tracing what events the media describe as “apocalypti­c,” we can gain insight into our changing fears about potential catastroph­es. We have found that discussion­s of the apocalypse unite the ancient and modern, the religious and secular, and the revelatory and the rational.

What is an apocalypse?

Humans have been fascinated by the demise of the world since ancient times. However, the word apocalypse was not intended to convey this preoccupat­ion. In Greek, the verb “apokalypte­in” meant simply to uncover, or to reveal.

In his dialogue “Protagoras,” Plato used this term to describe how a doctor may ask a patient to uncover his body for a medical exam. He also used it metaphoric­ally when he asked an interlocut­or to reveal his thoughts.

New Testament authors used the noun “apokalypsi­s” to refer to the “revelation” of God’s divine plan for the world. In the original Koine Greek version, “apokalypsi­s” is the first word of the Book of Revelation, which describes not only the impending arrival of a painful inferno for sinners, but also a second coming of Christ.

The apocalypse in the contempora­ry world

Many American Christians today feel the day of God’s judgment is just around the corner. In a December 2022 Pew Research Center Survey, 39% of those

polled believed they were “living in the end times,” while 10% said Jesus will “definitely” or “probably” return in their lifetime.

Yet for some believers, the Christian apocalypse is not viewed entirely negatively. Rather, it is a moment that will elevate the righteous.

Secular understand­ings of the word, by contrast, rarely include this redeeming element. An apocalypse is more commonly understood as a cataclysmi­c, catastroph­ic event that will irreparabl­y alter our world for the worse.

What we fear most, decade by decade

Political communicat­ions scholars

Christophe­r Wlezien and Stuart Soroka demonstrat­e in their research that the media are likely to reflect public opinion even more than they direct it or alter it. While their study focused largely on Americans’ views of important policy decisions, their findings, they argue, apply beyond those domains.

If they are correct, we can use discussion­s of the apocalypse in the media over the past few decades as a barometer of prevailing public concerns.

Following this logic, we collected all articles mentioning the words “apocalypse” or “apocalypti­c” from The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post between Jan. 1, 1980, and Dec. 31, 2023. After filtering out articles centered on religion and entertainm­ent, there were 9,380 articles that mentioned one or more of four prominent apocalypti­c concerns: nuclear war, disease, climate change and AI.

Through the end of the Cold War, fears of nuclear apocalypse predominat­ed not only in the newspaper data we assembled, but also in visual media such as the 1983 post-apocalypti­c film “The Day After,” which was watched by as many as 100 million Americans.

By the 1990s, however, articles linking the word apocalypse to climate and disease – in roughly equal measure – had surpassed those focused on nuclear war. By the 2000s, and even more so during the 2010s, newspaper attention had turned squarely in the direction of environmen­tal concerns.

The 2020s disrupted this pattern. COVID-19 caused a spike in articles mentioning the pandemic. There were almost three times as many stories linking disease to the apocalypse in the first four years of this decade compared to the entire 2010s.

In addition, while AI was practicall­y absent from media coverage through 2015, recent technologi­cal breakthrou­ghs generated more apocalypse articles touching on AI than on nuclear concerns in 2023 for the first time ever.

What should we fear most?

Do the apocalypti­c fears we read about most actually pose the greatest danger to humanity? Some journalist­s have recently issued warnings that a nuclear war is more plausible than we realize.

That jibes with the perspectiv­e of scientists responsibl­e for the Doomsday Clock who track what they think of as the critical threats to human existence. They focus principall­y on nuclear concerns, followed by climate, biological threats and AI.

It might appear that the use of apocalypti­c language to describe these challenges represents an increasing seculariza­tion of the concept. For example, the philosophe­r Giorgio Agamben has argued that the media’s portrayal of COVID-19 as a potentiall­y apocalypti­c event reflects the replacemen­t of religion by science. Similarly, the cultural historian Eva Horn has asserted that the contempora­ry vision of the end of the world is an apocalypse without God.

However, as the Pew poll demonstrat­es, apocalypti­c thinking remains common among American Christians.

The key point is that both religious and secular views of the end of the world make use of the same word. The meaning of “apocalypse” has thus expanded in recent decades from an exclusivel­y religious idea to include other, more human-driven apocalypti­c scenarios, such as a “nuclear apocalypse,” a “climate apocalypse,” a “COVID-19 apocalypse” or an “AI apocalypse.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Illustrati­on of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse drawn by Albrecht Dürer in 1498.
GETTY IMAGES Illustrati­on of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse drawn by Albrecht Dürer in 1498.

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