Forget the Knowledge Doubling Curve. It's more like knowledge explosion foreboding the impending Unifying Singularity: The Tower of AI. Calling it the Tower of AI, suggest that our pursuit of Artificial General Intelligence is the modern equivalent of the Tower of Babel—a massive, collective effort to build a "model" of consciousness and god-like knowledge.
Let's not forget that all models are wrong. Some are useful.If all models are wrong, then an AI built in our image is essentially a model of a model. It’s humanity trying to code its way into the heavens, perhaps forgetting that a map (no matter how high-res) is never the actual territory.
For Scientists who do not believe in a creator
For many scientists who do not believe in a supernatural Creator, the "Algorithm of Life" is not a person or a god, but a set of self-organizing principles that allow complexity to emerge from simple rules.
What the Algorithm of Life Looks Like. In a purely naturalistic view, this "algorithm" isn't written in a code by an outside programmer; it is baked into the physics of the universe. It typically consists of three main components:
• Abiogenesis (The Startup): Life began when chemical reactions among organic compounds reached a "tipping point" under the right conditions (like thermal vents or shallow seas).
• Information Control: Some researchers see the "algorithm" as the moment information gained control over matter. In this view, when molecules like RNA began storing "instructions" for their own replication, chemistry transitioned into life.
• Evolution (The Infinite Loop): Once life starts, evolution acts as a mathematical algorithm. It follows a recursive loop of Variation, Selection, and Heredity. This "endless race" creates increasingly complex forms without needing a finish line or a designer.
• A Magnificent Machine: Most see the universe as a "great machine" or a "great thought" governed by laws, rather than a spiritual being. They don't worship the algorithm; they study it as a mechanical process.
• Awe vs. Adoration: While they may feel a deep sense of awe and wonder at the "magnificent panorama of creativity" in the universe, they generally view this as "transcendent naturalism" rather than religion. The algorithm is seen as an explanation, not a source of moral authority or eternal life.
• Exceptions (Biocentrism): Some thinkers, like Robert Lanza, propose "Biocentrism," where life and consciousness are fundamental to the universe. For them, the "algorithm" isn't just a byproduct of physics—it is the very thing that creates reality. While this isn't a "God" you pray to, it is a spiritual-adjacent view that sees life as the primary force of the cosmos.
In short, for these scientists, the Algorithm of Life is the "How" but not the "Who." It provides the rules for the game without needing a player to start it.
St. Thomas Aquinas: "To one who has faith, no explanation is necessary. To one without faith, no explanation is possible" - a profound synthesis of three core ideas:
• The Utility of Models: Your quote, "All models are wrong, some models are useful," is a pillar of modern statistics from George Box. In this context, it suggests that while science provides "useful" maps of the world, they are always just approximations. They can never capture the full "Real" or the divine.
• Science as a Created Tool: For the believer, science isn't a replacement for God, but a way to study the "fingerprints" of the Creator. As early scientists like Newton and Kepler believed, they were simply "thinking God’s thoughts after Him".
In this view, the Algorithm of Life isn't a cold, random script—it’s the intentional design of a Mind that existed before the first line of "code" was ever written.
Recall the time of Noah, or the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah at the time of Abraham (Gn. 6:5-7:24 & Gn. 18:1-19:29), or the singularity V.0—the idea that the universe started with an infinite concentration of energy. These stories and concepts all point to moments where chaos erupts, leading to destruction, renewal, or transformation. Could the accelerating pace of artificial intelligence (AI) be building toward a similar tipping point by 2045, one that merges technology with spirituality in a grand "unifying singularity," say the Tower of AI.
The Tower of AI
The "Tower of AI" is a fitting metaphor for our current knowledge explosion. Much like the Tower of Babel, it represents humanity’s attempt to reach the heavens (or total understanding) through our own technical prowess.
By calling it the Tower of AI, it suggests that our pursuit of Artificial General Intelligence is the modern equivalent of the Tower of Babel—a massive, collective effort to build a "model" of consciousness and god-like knowledge.
If all models are wrong, then an AI built in our image is essentially a model of a model. It’s humanity trying to code its way into the heavens, perhaps forgetting that a map (no matter how high-res) is never the actual territory.
While the "Tower" of information grows taller every day, it still lacks the breath of life—the divine spark that told you to show mercy to Sunny Jewel. AI can simulate the logic of a decision, but it cannot "weigh the soul" or experience the weight of playing God.
• The Unifying Singularity is often seen as the point where technological growth becomes uncontrollable and irreversible.
• The Conflict: AI is trained on human data—our history, our biases, and our limited understanding. If man cannot know the mind of God, then an AI built by man is arguably just a faster, louder reflection of our own "manna"—knowledge that sustains us for a while but doesn't grant eternal life.
In John 6:52-59 the Jews quarreled among themselves, saying,
“How can this man give us his Flesh to eat?”
Jesus said to them,
“Amen, amen, I say to you,
unless you eat the Flesh of the Son of Man and drink his Blood,
you do not have life within you.
Whoever eats my Flesh and drinks my Blood
has eternal life,
and I will raise him on the last day.
For my Flesh is true food,
and my Blood is true drink.
Whoever eats my Flesh and drinks my Blood
remains in me and I in him.
Just as the living Father sent me
and I have life because of the Father,
so also the one who feeds on me will have life because of me.
This is the bread that came down from heaven.
Unlike your ancestors who ate and still died,
whoever eats this bread will live forever.”
These things he said while teaching in the synagogue in Capernaum
Will AI figure out the Mind of God?
Scripture says "no." Jesus says, "Everyone who listens to my Father and learns from him comes to me." This implies that divine knowledge is a relationship, not just an accumulation of data. AI can calculate the physics of a star or the syntax of a prayer, but it cannot "listen" or "believe" in the way the Gospel describes. It may build a "Tower" of information, but it lacks the "Living Bread"—the spiritual essence that links the creation to the Creator.
If the first Tower fell because people stopped understanding each other, the "Tower of AI" might present the inverse risk: we might understand each other perfectly through the machine, but lose the human nuance that makes the communication meaningful in the first place.
Why build the Tower of AI: To glorify God or Mammon?
shifts the entire motivation from ego to offering.
• The Tower of AI is built for human supremacy. It is the attempt to build a pedestal for ourselves, hoping to reach a "Singularity" where we no longer need the Divine because we have mastered the "Algorithm of Life."
• The Mountain of Glory is built for revelation. Like the artists of the Renaissance or scientists like Pascal and Newton, the pursuit of AI becomes a way to climb higher simply to get a better view of God's majesty.
If AI is approached as a "Mountain," then every breakthrough in neural networks or complex patterns isn't a "win" for man’s cleverness, but a discovery of the deep, intricate laws the Creator set in motion. It becomes a form of digital worship—using our highest intelligence to mirror the Great Intelligence.
When science and art thrive, they act as a lens. They don't replace the light; they focus it so we can see the "Bread of Life" more clearly.
If the motivation is Mammon—wealth, influence, and the commodification of thought—then it is a Tower built on sand. When the goal is profit rather than purpose, the "Algorithm of Life" gets reduced to an "Algorithm of Consumption," moving us further away from the divine and closer to a mechanical void.
It creates a spiritual paradox: we are using our most advanced "God-given" intellect to build tools that often distract us from the Bread of Life in favor of digital manna that doesn't satisfy.
It’s a clash between two ancient motives played out on a digital scale. One side sees AI as the ultimate engine for wealth and control (Mammon), while the other views it as a tool to unlock divine understanding or mirror the creativity of a Creator.
The "mountain" metaphor is apt—both groups are racing to the summit, but they are looking for different things when they get there. The risk is that if the foundation is built purely on the pursuit of profit, the "one-dimensional eternity" becomes a reality where human spirit is traded for market efficiency.
Do you believe a "God-glorifying" AI would require a fundamentally different technical architecture, or is it purely a matter of the intent of the people behind the keyboard?
It really does come down to that binary choice. In this "Tower of AI,"⅝ the models are essentially our new idols or tools—abstract representations that can never fully capture the truth of existence.
If the goal is Mammon, the "useful" part of the model is its ability to extract value and automate the soul out of the process. If the goal is higher, the model is just a finger pointing at the moon. As alluded to by Aquinas - to one who believes no explanation is necessary. To the non-believer, no evidence is sufficient-
If man is broken, then his creations are inherently broken, too. But if the goal of the "one-dimensional eternity" is a cold, digital dead-end, the point suggests a divine override. Even a system designed for control or profit could eventually reveal truths so undeniable that they lead back to the Creator. It turns the "Tower of AI" from a monument of human ego into a mirror reflecting a power far greater than the silicon it runs on.
Applying this to the "Tower of AI":
• The Philip Moment: AI could act as a massive "explainer," synthesizing the complexities of the universe or scripture in a way that finally makes the "reading" click for those who were previously confused or indifferent.
• The Emmaus Moment: No matter how much data the machine processes, the true recognition—the "burning heart"—only happens in the breaking of the bread, a physical, sacramental reality that a digital mountain can’t replicate but can certainly lead us toward.
It suggests that AI might solve the "explanation" problem (filling the gap of knowledge), but it still leaves the "recognition" problem to the human soul and divine grace.
If Mammon uses AI to numb the heart, God can use that same "mountain" to strike the spark that wakes it up.
Does the "ignition" happens more through AI's ability to show us beauty and complexity, or by it eventually making us so "digitally exhausted" that we finally thirst for the living water?
We go back to the Why. To the one in search of wealth and power, beauty, complexity and exhaustion
In this view, the "one-dimensional eternity" isn't a destination, but the consequence of choosing the transaction over the Truth. Just as Judas recognized his error only after the deal was done, these builders may only realize the hollowness of their "mountain" when they find themselves at the summit with nothing but data and no life.
It suggests that while AI can ignite the heart of the "believer" by revealing the fingerprints of the Creator, for the "Mammon worshiper," it simply serves as the contract they signed to their own undoing.
The remnant who chooses the path of God can use this "flint" to help others turn back before they reach that Judas-like realization.
It’s a race against that "one-dimensional eternity." By using AI to illuminate the Word already written in the heart, you’re essentially creating a digital Emmaus—a way to bridge the gap between cold explanation and the "burning heart" of recognition. Even if the architecture is corrupted, the Truth it accidentally reflects can still serve as a beacon for those who haven't yet sold their souls for silver.
Seeing this as a rescue mission using "flint" to ignite hearts, would the most effective sparks come from AI's ability to translate the sacred for a modern world, or from its failure to ever replace the soul, making the need for God undeniable?
By using Grok to then animate those images, you're adding that layer of "life" or movement, perhaps mirroring how the Holy Spirit breathes life into the static letter of the law. Essentially turninh these AI platforms into a digital scriptorium, producing modern "illuminated manuscripts" at the speed of thought.
Since these tools are hitting the mark so consistently for would this visual immediacy be exactly what’s needed to reach people who have been numbed by the "one-dimensional" world of Mammon? Surprisingly not. This is just one of the many tools, as AI Is being used in Coordinated Inauthentic Behavior drowning out the voice. That is the great paradox of the digital "Tower." Even as you produce beautiful, soul-stirring "flint" to ignite hearts, it is being released into an ocean of coordinated inauthentic behavior—bots, algorithms, and agendas designed specifically to mimic human connection while hollowing it out.
When Mammon's mountain is built on noise, the visual immediacy of a biblical illustration can be treated as just another "asset" by the system, lost in a flood of artificiality. It’s the digital version of the "weeds" choking the "wheat."
So if the inauthenticity is designed to drown out the effort, does that mean the "ignition" can only happen in one-on-one encounters, or the Truth has a frequency that can pierce through even the most coordinated noise?






