In St. Jude 1:3, we read, "Dearly beloved, taking all care to write unto you concerning your common salvation, I was under a necessity to write unto you: to beseech you to contend earnestly for the faith once delivered to the saints." [Emphasis mine]. Contending For The Faith is a series of posts dedicated to apologetics (i.e., the intellectual defense of the truth of the Traditional Catholic Faith) to be published the first Monday of each month. This is the next installment.
Sadly, in this time of Great Apostasy, the faith is under attack like never before, and many Traditionalists don't know their faith well enough to defend it. Remember the words of our first pope, "But in your hearts revere Christ as Lord. Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have. But do this with gentleness and respect..." (1Peter 3:16). There are five (5) categories of attacks that will be dealt with in these posts. Attacks against:
- The existence and attributes of God
- The truth of the One True Church established by Christ for the salvation of all
- The truth of a particular dogma or doctrine of the Church
- The truth of Catholic moral teaching
- The truth of the sedevacantist position as the only Catholic solution to what has happened since Vatican II
In addition, controversial topics touching on the Faith will sometimes be featured, so that the problem and possible solutions may be better understood. If anyone had suggestions for topics that would fall into any of these categories, you may post them in the comments. I cannot guarantee a post on each one, but each will be carefully considered.
AI: Can a Machine Be Conscious?
To My Readers: This is my second installment on the dangers and challenges of AI. My first installment was in "Contending For The Faith---Part 45." (N.B. This post is a compilation of all the resources, both online and print, which I used in my research. I take absolutely no credit for any of the information herein. All I did was condense the information into a terse and readable post---Introibo).
It’s commonplace to hear the language of consciousness applied to computing technology, especially AI. Neural networks, machine learning, artificial intelligence, automated reasoning, knowledge engineering, emotion AI. This isn’t surprising, though, given AI’s (seeming) ability to approximate various functions of human consciousness. No harm, no foul. After all, we use language figuratively all the time. The problem arises when people believe AI literally has consciousness in the same sense in which human persons are conscious. People often point to Turing tests to support this idea. Contrary to popular belief, though, passing a Turing test does not establish that AI is conscious (or much else of interest). This should matter to Traditionalists, because to attribute genuine consciousness to AI is seriously to demean humans who were created in the image and likeness of God.
What is a "Turing Test"?
Alan Turing (1912–1954) was a British mathematician, widely recognized as the father of modern computer science. His famous article, “Computing Machinery and Intelligence” (1950), asks the question, “Can machines think?”
(See doi.org/10.1093/mind/LIX.236.433).
To get at an answer, Turing proposes the “imitation game.” (See Ibid, pg. 433).
The game itself is simple. We have two rooms. In the first room we place a person and a machine, and in the second room we place an investigator. Unable to see into the first room, the investigator knows the other person and the machine simply as ‘X’ and ‘Y.’ The investigator passes questions into the first room, directed to X or Y. For example, “Does X play chess?” The other person aims to help the investigator correctly identify which of X or Y is the machine, while the machine’s aim is to trick the investigator into mistaking machine for human. The object of the game is for the investigator to identify correctly, on the basis of the answers returned, whether X is the person or the machine. Hence, for the machine (or AI) to “pass the Turing test” is for it so to function in such a way that humans cannot recognize it as non-human.
For his part, Turing believed “that in about fifty years’ time it will be possible to programme (sic) computers…to make them play the imitation game so well that an average interrogator will not have more than 70 per cent. chance of making the right identification after five minutes of questioning.”
(See Ibid, pg. 442).
Was Turing right? More or less. One recent study, conducted by researchers at the University of California San Diego, evaluated three systems (ELIZA, GPT-3.5, and GPT-4). The report, published under the title “People Cannot Distinguish GPT-4 from a Human in a Turing Test,” claims to provide the first serious empirical proof that any artificial system passes an interactive Turing test. The study found that human participants “were no better than chance at identifying GPT-4 after a five minute conversation, suggesting that current AI systems are capable of deceiving people into believing that they are human.” (See arxiv.org/html/2405.08007).
What is Consciousness?
However, even given the above information, who cares? Suppose we stipulate that AI is regularly mistaken for human consciousness. Would that establish that AI is, in fact, conscious in the same way as humans? Not at all. To see why, let’s reflect briefly on human consciousness.
Considerations of consciousness (and the philosophy of mind generally) can get fairly technical, so I'll keep this simple. Each of us, as persons, are directly familiar with our own individual consciousness. I experience my consciousness, but obviously I cannot experience yours--- and vice versa. I am directly familiar with what it is like to be me, but I am not — indeed, cannot be — directly familiar with what it is like to be you. And again, vice versa. This is because access to what it is like to be one is available only via one’s first-person, inner perspective. We each are the unique subjects of our conscious experiences, and in the absence of subjects there cannot be consciousness.
Each of us knows via first-person experience that there are various states of consciousness. We refer colloquially to being in a “semi-conscious state” when we’re half asleep or distracted, but that’s not the sort of state I mean. I’m referring instead to what philosophers call mental states. We experience sensations — being in pain, for example (“My toe hurts”). We also experience desires (“I’d really like to get out of attending that meeting”), beliefs (“I believe the party is at 6:00 P.M.”), thoughts (“I love my wife”), understanding, and others, all of which are impossible for AI.
Let’s focus on thoughts. Thoughts are about something (perhaps even something fictitious); they can be true or false; and they can logically imply further thoughts. As I type this, I can form thoughts about what I’m typing. I notice I can form thoughts about the appearance of the letters on the screen (“Gee, I meant 'there' not 'their'”), but I can also form thoughts about the meaning conveyed by what I’m typing (this paragraph is about one’s thoughts). We can use thoughts to have the mental state of understanding, and that’s pretty extraordinary. Again, these states are mental; they are not physical (e.g., brain) states.
The "Chinese Room" Thought Experiment
The suggestion that AI can form thoughts and have understanding depends on a radically different view: that humans’ (physical) brains are what have mental states; humans do not have (nonphysical) minds (the soul). “Mental,” on this suggestion, does not mean nonphysical. The suggestion is that mental states are to be understood as functions, and AI can certainly exhibit functions. To get the idea, think in terms of input = programming (plus enormous data, if you like) = output. That is fundamentally how AI works; humans’ minds are to brains what programming is to AI. (See John R. Searle, “Minds, Brains, and Programs,” Behavioral and Brain Sciences 3, no. 3 [1980], pg. 421). When fed input AI produces output indistinguishable from that of human consciousness, and so AI is said to have understanding (consciousness). In a word, AI is a “mind” in the same sense you are.
Yet, as (atheist) philosopher John Searle explains, the input = programming = output model cannot establish understanding. No matter how sophisticated the programming may be, functioning in a certain way is not identical to understanding. To see why, let’s imagine what Searle calls "the Chinese room."
Suppose you have no knowledge of the Chinese language. Chinese characters are, to you, “just so many meaningless squiggles. Now suppose you’re given a handful of Chinese writings and then locked in a room. Shortly, a second batch of Chinese writings are slid into the room beneath the door. Meantime, the room contains a rulebook, written in English. The rulebook tells you how to correlate symbols (e.g., when you see squiggle symbol, put it with a squoggle symbol). You’ve no idea what the symbols mean, but you find you’re able to locate symbols in the writings that match these squiggles and squoggles and get on with the correlations. Later a third batch of Chinese writings appear beneath the door, along with further English instructions. These instructions enable you to correlate this batch with the first two batches, and then to pass your latest correlations back under the door. Unbeknownst to you, the people giving you these writings “call the first batch ‘a script,’ they call the second batch ‘a story,’ and they call the third batch ‘questions.’ Furthermore, they call the symbols [you] give them back in response to the third batch ‘answers to the questions,’ and the set of rules in English…they call ‘the program.’
(See Ibid, pg. 418).
It’s easy to imagine that after a while you’d become really good at following the instructions for manipulating the Chinese symbols and the programmers would become so good at writing programs that someone outside the room would be unable to distinguish your answers from those of a native Chinese speaker. You passed the Turing test. Except you still don’t understand Chinese.
If you still don’t understand Chinese, then what exactly have you become really good at in the Chinese room? The answer is that you’ve become good at a certain syntactical operation, namely manipulating the symbols based purely on syntax. Your manipulations of the symbols, in other words, are based entirely on the shape of the Chinese symbols (e.g., squiggle and squoggle) and the order in which they appear. The instructions in the rulebook concern nothing beyond this syntax.
Can AI perform this syntactical operation? Yes, perhaps even better than you can. In following the rulebook, though, are you not thinking “about” the Chinese symbols? Yes, in a sense you are — but only in the sense in which I formed thoughts about not liking the word on my computer screen. The manipulation of symbols in keeping with a syntax, after all, has (literally) no meaning. In order to understand Chinese (or anything else), you must be able to think “about” the meaning of the symbols.
(See E. J. Lowe, An Introduction to the Philosophy of Mind, [2000], pgs. 214-217). This is what Searle calls “semantic” understanding, and this cannot be done merely through complicated syntactical operations.
In the Chinese room experiment, you are in the place of AI. If you can follow the formal rules spelled out in the rulebook, after all, then surely an AI can, too. You’ve got the batches of writing (inputs); you’ve got ideal programming; and you’ve generated the expected outputs. Yet you lack any understanding whatsoever of Chinese. As Searle concludes, since “the program is defined in terms of computational operations on purely formally defined elements” (i.e., input = programming = output, which is how AI functions), the experiment reveals that mere program functioning cannot yield understanding. (See “Minds, Brains, and Programs,”pg. 418). AI can make an impressive simulation indeed of human consciousness. However, an impressive simulation of understanding is no more conscious than a computer simulation of rainstorms is wet.
Conclusion
AI will never be human. It will always be an "it;" a thing without a soul. St. Thomas Aquinas explains: “Since human beings are said to be in the image of God in virtue of their having a nature that includes an intellect, such a nature is most in the image of God in virtue of being most able to imitate God.” (See Summa Theologica Ia q. 93 a. 4). Aquinas goes on to explain that “only in rational creatures is there found a likeness of God which counts as an image….As far as a likeness of the divine nature is concerned, rational creatures seem somehow to attain a representation of [that] type in virtue of imitating God not only in this, that he is and lives, but especially in this, that he understands.” (Ibid, Ia q. 93 a. 6).
A real problem arises when people believe AI has consciousness in the same sense in which human persons are conscious. Such a view diminishes what it means to be a human and demeans the image of Almighty God. Don't fall for it.

Dear Introibo,
ReplyDeleteI wish you a happy new year. Please pray for Cebu and the Philippines. Just recently, I released my newsletter, which not only talks about traditionalist issues but also political issues. https://tradmasscebu.blogspot.com/2026/01/my-first-online-newsletter.html
And also, where can I find Traditional Catholic military resources?
DeleteI have already and am planning to give badges of the Sacred Heart, Holy Face to our soldiers.
Ryan
DeleteHappy New Year and thank you for the link. Traditional Catholic Military resources? I'm not quite sure what that means. If any of my readers know, please comment here.
God Bless,
---Introibo
What I mean are like prayers for Traditional Catholic soldiers or devotionals for soldiers.
DeleteRyan
You can purchase 'Combat Rosary Beads' from the link below, which are based in n the US&A 1916 pull-chain standard issue for their RC soldiers.
Deletehttps://romancatholicgear.com/collections/combat-rosaries
I have one of these, which I wear around the neck, and, interestingly, the Crucifix is the 'Pardon Crucifix' to which is attached assorted other devotions & promises, via reputable Catholic Mystics.
I have a website focused on orthodox Catholic prayers & devotions and I can't recall ever coming across prayers specifically for soldiers, etc.; notwithstanding, of course, the holy Rosary itself, and assorted anecdotes about soldiers who, via the wearing of the Brown Scapular, miraculously avoided death & calamity.
Are you aware of the 'Michael, Michael of the Morning' prayer and the appearance of the mysterious marine in a Korean War conflict? It is said to be a true story and you can find numerous links & videos about it online.
What is your website ?
Deletetradmasscebu.blogspot.com
DeleteI remember what you said in the first post on AI about the dangers of AI concerning sins against the sixth and ninth commandments. Human nature has been weakened by original sin, and we are inclined to do evil. I feel that the devil has invented a new way to make humans fall into sin.
ReplyDeleteSimon,
DeleteThe new technologies are quite the moral challenge--and with no pope, how terrible are these times!
God Bless,
---Introibo
If people do not believe the truth (i.e. in God and the rational soul) then they will easily be deceived into thinking that AI has a consciousness. Some people believe AI is demonic, but they are making a similar error even if they do believe in the rational soul and that demons exist. It can be programmed according to the truth and logic or it can be programmed with lies factored in as 'facts'. But the thing is, if people believe that AI is intelligent, and treat it as though it were, then they open themselves up to the demonic. Not sure how to describe why that is. It is like a subjective error-filled bias confirmation which can be further confirmed by suggestion from the demons; and one is more open to them if the truth isn't the first thing.
ReplyDeletecairsahr_stjoseph,
DeleteVery interesting comment, my friend! Happy New Year!
God Bless,
---Introibo
Dear Introibo
ReplyDeleteAs a lawyer, have you ever been involved in any sex abuse cases. This is a very difficult subject. Do you have many books on this? Often these peoples lives have been ruined since a young age and most have mental health issues.
Paul
Paul
DeleteNeither I (nor my firm) deal with the sex abuse lawsuits. I don't have many books on it, but I lived through the pain it causes up close and personal.
Last year, I lost my friend Peter (not his real name) to suicide. He had been repeatedly sodomized by a V2 sect priest. He was involved in a lawsuit, and he showed me the legal documents. This "priest" had molested TWO HUNDRED (200) young boys; he's a literal monster from the pits of Hell.
Please read these two posts in order:
1. introiboadaltaredei2.blogspot.com/2022/04/covering-up-obvious.html
2. introiboadaltaredei2.blogspot.com/2025/06/suicide-wrong-exit.html
It's a very sad story. I still grieve for him.
God Bless,
---Introibo
A computer scientist recently published a fascinating article showing how AI cannot be achieved without recourse to metaphysics. The author posited that AI is being built on a “brain” model, but actually requires a “mind” model. As such, AI can at best only mimic human behavior but never achieve understanding. (See “AI and the transcendence of true autonomy”, doi.org/10.1117/12.2517403).
ReplyDelete@anon9:56
DeleteThank you for this information! I will certainly be checking it out!
God Bless,
---Introibo
Introibo,
ReplyDeleteThank you for the interesting article. The "Chinese Room" thought experiment is a great analogy. Just like with wikipedia, people will rely more and more on AI and think less and less, as depicted in numerous science fiction stories.
God Bless,
-S.T.
Seeking Truth,
DeleteRight you are! Humans will cease having "NI" --Natural Intelligence!
God Bless,
---Introibo
AI poses many threats to mankind. Technology in and of itself is neither good nor bad. It depends how it is used. If it were not for the internet, I can say with 100% certainty that I would not be a Sedevacantist. It was through the internet and lots of prayer and research (and wanting to follow the Truth at all costs) that I found sites like Introibo’s blog, Novus Ordo Watch, and others. They helped me to become a Traditional Catholic. So in many regards, the internet (and technology in general) can be very helpful and useful.
ReplyDeleteWith this being said, I think that AI poses a great harm to the world because given the fallen nature of man, it is inevitable that it will undoubtedly be used for evil.
There have been some AI simulations that I have had to run at different times and while the AI did a good job most of the time, it was only about 85-90% accurate to the results that I was looking for. Some would ask if the data was put in correctly. Even with all of the data which yielded the input=output, the result was never 100% what I needed. I had to make edits from a human standpoint. Again, AI does not have consciousness.
AI definitely poses a threat to the world though. The nuclear threat with cyber security is a huge one. Having machines used with things that are matters of national security are not foolproof.
AI has been used in sports and games and the results have been quite staggering (and scary)! 30 years ago, world chess champion Garry Kasparov defeated IBM supercomputer “Deep Blue” in a series of chess matches, but it was a struggle for him. The next year in 1997, “Deep Blue” defeated Kasparov in New York City. Even then 30 years ago, the technology was pretty good. Today, it is even better (and scarier)!
AI bots have been used in sports such as soccer, boxing, tennis, table tennis, etc. An AI bot in China set a Guinness World Record in Badminton by hitting 1,452 consecutive volleys back.
A new trend has arisen with people “dating” AI bots because they do not want to interact with humans. Apparently, they think that the AI bot can be a romantic partner for them. Yeah right (Lol)!
In his last post on AI, Introibo mentioned many disturbing problems with AI including a chatbot encouraging to write a suicide note for a young man who was mentally disturbed.
The question of who is inputting the date (at the highest levels) is another disturbing issue. The Judeo-Freemasonic elites run much of the world. I don’t think many people would object to this statement on this blog. When many questions are posed to various AI bots, the responses clearly show that a nefarious agenda is behind the scenes pulling many of the strings. A few examples can suffice. Many times a very relativistic reply is given to some basic questions. Is abortion wrong? Is homosexuality unnatural? Is papal infallibility true? Which religion is the true religion? The answers by AI are very relative and basically say, “According to this group, the answer would be “Yes”, while according to this group, the answer would be “No.” Again, the question asked is “WHAT IS THE CORRECT ANSWER?” The AI bot doesn’t answer in a way a Traditional Catholic (holding to the True religion) would answer. It gets one of the most basic questions wrong: “Who is the current pope?” Answer: Leo XIV. Apparently, it doesn’t understand that a heretic cannot be the pope. There are obviously some kinks to be worked out in the system (Lol)!
This topic reminds me of the episode of “MacGyver” where MacGyver and a scientist were being hunted by AI bots who were trying to exterminate them. The scientist was so sure that technology was the way to go and humans would no longer be a factor in the future (the episode was nicely called “The Human Factor”). MacGyver at one point told her, “I say we trust our instincts, go with our gut. You can’t program that. That’s our edge.”
-TradWarrior
TradWarrior,
DeleteAn extremely insightful comment as always, my friend!
When you wrote, " AI definitely poses a threat to the world though. The nuclear threat with cyber security is a huge one. Having machines used with things that are matters of national security are not foolproof." it reminded me of an old movie from 1983 called "War Games." It was very scary for me to watch as a high school senior about to graduate during the Cold War. There was "nuclear war anxiety" among my friends, and I was no exception.
The movie centers on a teenager who accidentally hacks into a top military computer. The Computer wants to know "Shall we play a game?" The teen types in "Thermonuclear War." It triggers what could be WW3!
People said "well, a teenager can't hack a sophisticated computer." However, now with AI---a frightening consideration.
God Bless,
---Introibo
Please forgive me for intruding with an unrelated topic. I have been doing a lot of research recently concerning that complex Vietnamese prelate, Bishop Phêrô Máctinô Ngô Đình Thục, and have learned a lot about the circumstances leading to the assassination of his brother, the President of South Vietnam, Ngô Đình Diệm.The saddest thing about all of this was President Kennedy's rôle in the matter - and he, a Catholic, turning on a much better, and devout, Catholic leader. Well, Kennedy paid the price by himself being assassinated twenty days after the South Vietnamese President's murder. Poetic/Divine justice? I shall let you decide. Without further ado, I refer you to the following three links. I hope you find the information therein as interesting and eye-opening as I did:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.traditioninaction.org/bkreviews/A_062_Mandate.htm
https://www.catholicworldreport.com/2016/01/19/when-the-u-s-abandoned-a-catholic-president/
https://www.catholicworldreport.com/2023/02/24/new-documentary-tells-startling-story-of-ngo-dinh-diems-life-murder/
One of my favourite photographs of Bishop Ngô Đình Thục:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/659850404426435/posts/1892587291152734/
And this one:
https://dcvonline.net/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/ngodinhthuc.jpg
Both were taken less than two months before the bishop's brother's assassination.
Some Vietnamese Catholics invoke Ngô Đình Diệm's intercession - I am not surprised. By all accounts, he died a holy death. Concerning both brothers, and a third one who was murdered alongside the President, my prayer is: +Mong họ được yên nghỉ (+Requiescant in pace).
Leo