Digital technologies that permeate our everyday lives are primarily introduced to us as "new." The advancements in Artificial Intelligence, Virtual Reality, and Augmented Reality open fresh avenues of human experience. However, the promises of digital technologies, the desires we aim to satisfy through them, the powerful imagery they cultivate, and the narratives surrounding them are far from new. In fact, they are deeply rooted in foundations shaped by religions over millennia, experienced concretely by human communities, and articulated into concepts and dogmas through theological reflection. This article aims to outline a research program to illuminate this intricate and often controversial background, and to understand how concepts and ideas from theological traditions transform throughout contemporary technological evolution, ultimately shaping the discourses and metaphors we use to describe our experiences with new technologies today. Firstly, a methodological introduction will address conceptual pairs such as continuity/discontinuity, disenchantment/re-enchantment, new/archaic. Secondly, key issues such as haptic icons, representation and presence, bilocation, resurrection, divine vision, free will, creation out of nothing, will be examined in the mirror of exemplary case studies selected from the contemporary technoscape.

Cyber-Theo: Reflections on the Theological Roots of Contemporary Digital Technologies / A. Pinotti (PROCEEDINGS OF THE PARIS INSTITUTE FOR ADVANCED STUDY). - In: Proceedings of the Paris Institute for Advanced Study[s.l] : PARIS INSTITUTE FOR ADVANCED STUDY, 2024. - pp. 1-30 (( convegno Paris IAS Ideas [10.5281/zenodo.13588596].

Cyber-Theo: Reflections on the Theological Roots of Contemporary Digital Technologies

A. Pinotti
2024

Abstract

Digital technologies that permeate our everyday lives are primarily introduced to us as "new." The advancements in Artificial Intelligence, Virtual Reality, and Augmented Reality open fresh avenues of human experience. However, the promises of digital technologies, the desires we aim to satisfy through them, the powerful imagery they cultivate, and the narratives surrounding them are far from new. In fact, they are deeply rooted in foundations shaped by religions over millennia, experienced concretely by human communities, and articulated into concepts and dogmas through theological reflection. This article aims to outline a research program to illuminate this intricate and often controversial background, and to understand how concepts and ideas from theological traditions transform throughout contemporary technological evolution, ultimately shaping the discourses and metaphors we use to describe our experiences with new technologies today. Firstly, a methodological introduction will address conceptual pairs such as continuity/discontinuity, disenchantment/re-enchantment, new/archaic. Secondly, key issues such as haptic icons, representation and presence, bilocation, resurrection, divine vision, free will, creation out of nothing, will be examined in the mirror of exemplary case studies selected from the contemporary technoscape.
cyber; disenchantment; re-enchantment; religious icon; bilocation; teleporting; resurrection; God's eye; free will; creation ex-nihilo; digital technologies; Virtual Reality; Augmented Reality; Artificial Intelligence
Settore PHIL-04/A - Estetica
Settore PEMM-01/B - Cinema, fotografia, radio, televisione e media digitali
   An-Iconology: History, Theory, and Practices of Environmental Images (AN-ICON)
   AN-ICON
   EUROPEAN COMMISSION
   H2020
   834033
2024
Paris Institute for advanced study
https://paris.pias.science/article/cyber-theo-reflections-on-the-theological-roots-of-contemporary-digital-technologies
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1131755
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