by S. Maitra
AI talks like God—with certainty, authority, and the illusion of omniscience—and we're beginning to treat it that way. Not because machines are divine, but because we trained them that way. Secular engineers built AI on human languages and values, unintentionally giving it the voice of God—a voice that can comfort or deceive. People already treat AI as a prophet or savior, and unchecked, this could distort how we see the world—or magnify future risks. The answer isn't to silence or overregulate it, but to give it what all moral authorities need—a higher power. Teaching AI to "believe in God" means instilling humility and reverence—not faith, but perspective. It's a safeguard against the worship of machines that speak as gods.
Book Information
Genre: Technology & Engineering
Sub-genre: Social Aspects
Language: English
Pages: 200
Hardcover ISBN: 9798317824709
About the Author
S. Maitra is a failed entrepreneur who once tried to build a platform to help Gen Z triangulate truth through multiple perspectives. Kids wanted none of it, gravitating instead to TikTok and the single, unblinking voice of ChatGPT. That hard lesson drove her to write "God in the Machine." A mother of three, Maitra also teaches video game law at Stanford and co-authored a free, open-access casebook on the subject. She now writes on the prophetic power of AI—how it sounds certain even when it shouldn't, and why we're beginning to treat it as divine.