This is something of a follow on, deeper dive, to the recent post "AI's (Perplexity) Guides to dealing with AI-enhanced fraud and scams: General, Christian, Muslim, Atheist/secular humanist, "Senior Citizen," and Japanese Buddhist/Shinto approaches"
As in that post, the initial draft and reference listing was "co-created" using Perplexity AI. In what follows, my comments or paraphrases are generally in boldface/italics. Part of the prompts for the text included framing the material in blog style. For more detailed discussion of each worldview, see the "mother" blog.
"AI isn’t just a technology story. It is a worldview stress test."
For some, AI phobia is very real: a knot in the stomach about job loss, deepfakes, surveillance, or a machine future where humans no longer matter. Psychologists now talk about “AI anxiety” as a specific flavor of technophobia, mixing fear of the unknown with a sense that things are changing too fast to understand or control.[1][2]
How differently our basic worldviews may "metabolize" that fear:
If you begin from a traditional theist frame,
- AI is not ultimate—God is.
- AI becomes one more powerful tool that must submit to moral law and the command to love your neighbor.
- The real danger is not “the robots” but human sin expressed through new capabilities.[3][4][5]
From a secular humanist perspective,
- There are no divine guarantees, but there is confidence that humans can still set the rules.
- AI phobia here is a call to action: insist on transparency, regulation, and alignment with human rights and dignity.
- Fear is something to turn into civic engagement.[6][7][8]
A hard scientific materialist
- Sees AI as complex machinery plus hype.
- Fear gets reframed as a prediction error: an evolved brain reacting badly to unfamiliar risk.
- The remedy is data: measure actual harms, build safety protocols, and push back against apocalyptic storytelling with evidence.[9][1]
Eastern or non‑dualist traditions
- May see AI as another impermanent phenomenon in a web of interdependence.
- Anxious clinging to “how things used to be” is part of the suffering.
- The response is inner training—mindfulness, ethical intention, community norms for compassionate use—rather than grand promises of control.[2][3]
- Sees AI through a blended lens of Confucian, Daoist, and Buddhist ideas, prioritizing family duty, social harmony, and alignment with the larger order of things.[1][2][3]
- Addresses AI phobia by focusing on **ethical governance and harmony**: calm inner attitudes toward change, firm outer rules to prevent social disruption, and channeling AI into roles that support education, order, and collective well‑being rather than undermine them.[4][5][6][7]
- Sees AI within God’s providence and under the authority of Scripture, emphasizing personal salvation, evangelism, and the need for discernment in a morally confused digital age.[1][2][3][4]
- Addresses AI phobia through **trust and testing**: urging believers to reject fear‑driven doom narratives, place ultimate security in Christ rather than technology, and rigorously “test the spirits” of new tools
- Using AI for mission, service, and daily work only where it aligns with biblical ethics, protects the vulnerable, and avoids idolatry of efficiency or progress.[2][3][4][5][6][1]
- AI as either the Beast or the Singularity.
- Here AI phobia can spiral into dread—
- or into urgent calls for repentance, moratoriums,
- or radical limits on machine power.[10][11][9]
So here, of course, is the question:
- Which of these feels most like home or gulag to you?
- How does that lens shape what you fear most about AI—and what you hope for?
- What would/does/did it take, in your worldview, to move from paralysis to responsible action?
Use the comment section to respond or push back. The next post will be a survey of empirical reseach on the general phenomenon, generally from the "hard scientific" and "secular humanist" perspectives.
| Clker.com |
Sources
[1](https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S294988212500012X)
[2](https://www.calm.com/blog/ai-anxiety-tips)
[3](https://ccta.regent.edu/the-intersection-of-artificial-intelligence-and-christian-thought-a-vision-for-the-future/)
[4](https://cbhd.org/dignitas-articles/ai-and-human-futures-what-should-christians-think)
[5](https://christoverall.com/article/longform/a-christians-perspective-on-artificial-intelligence/)
[6](https://humanistperspectives.org/234/artificial-intelligence-and-humanism-in-action/)
[7](https://humanists.uk/2025/07/10/humanists-pass-global-declaration-on-artificial-intelligence-and-human-values/)
[8](https://itlawco.com/secular-ai-ethics-building-a-universal-code/)
[9](https://bloustein.rutgers.edu/samuel-and-colleagues-examine-the-rise-of-ai-phobia/)
[10](https://www.mastersbiblechurch.com/blog/why-christians-should-stay-informed-about-ai)
[11](https://religionnews.com/2025/12/23/ai-comes-with-a-built-in-worldview-christians-need-to-understand-it/)
Chinese Worldview sources
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