Saturday, 13 June 2026

The Prophet's Dilemma

The Senior Common Room was enjoying a quiet afternoon.

Professor Quillibrace was reading.

Miss Stray was making notes.

Mr Blottisham was reading an interview with great enthusiasm.

Every few moments he emitted a small noise of approval.

Eventually Quillibrace looked up.

"Good news?"

"Excellent news."

"How reassuring."

Blottisham lowered the magazine.

"A distinguished AI researcher has settled the matter."

"Oh dear."

"What?"

"Nothing. Please continue."

Blottisham adjusted his spectacles.

"He says that machine consciousness is inevitable."

"I see."

"He is one of the world's leading experts."

"On what?"

"Artificial intelligence."

Quillibrace nodded.

"And therefore?"

"And therefore he knows what he is talking about."

The room became quiet.

Miss Stray slowly placed down her pen.

Quillibrace closed his book.

"What now?" said Blottisham.

"I fear we have arrived at a crossroads."

"A crossroads?"

"One road leads to expertise."

"And the other?"

"Authority."

Blottisham frowned.

"I do not see the distinction."

"That is what worries me."

Miss Stray smiled.

"It is a surprisingly common difficulty."

Blottisham looked annoyed.

"Very well. Explain."

Quillibrace folded his hands.

"Suppose I consult a surgeon."

"A sensible choice."

"The surgeon informs me that my appendix requires removal."

"Good."

"I trust the surgeon."

"Naturally."

"Now suppose the surgeon begins explaining the ultimate purpose of human existence."

Blottisham hesitated.

"That seems a different matter."

"Why?"

"Because surgery is not philosophy."

"Excellent."

"There it is again."

Quillibrace ignored him.

"So we agree that expertise in one domain does not automatically confer expertise in another."

"Obviously."

"Good."

Blottisham relaxed.

The relaxation proved premature.

Quillibrace continued.

"Now let us consider the AI researcher."

"What about him?"

"He understands machine learning systems."

"Extremely well."

"I have no doubt."

"And?"

"Does that expertise automatically extend to consciousness?"

Blottisham opened his mouth.

Paused.

Closed it again.

"Perhaps."

"Why?"

"Because the machines are involved."

Miss Stray laughed softly.

"The machines are indeed involved."

Blottisham looked relieved.

"Thank you."

"Unfortunately," she continued, "so is consciousness."

His relief disappeared.

Quillibrace rose and wandered toward the fireplace.

"Imagine a brilliant engineer who designs telescopes."

"Yes?"

"Would that make the engineer an authority on the meaning of the universe?"

"No."

"A brilliant geneticist?"

"No."

"A brilliant physicist?"

Blottisham hesitated.

"No."

"Then why a brilliant AI researcher?"

Blottisham looked troubled.

"Because they are studying minds."

"Are they?"

The question hung in the air.

"Well..."

Blottisham shifted slightly.

"Are they not?"

Quillibrace considered.

"They are certainly studying systems that perform tasks humans associate with minds."

"That sounds suspiciously similar."

"It sounds similar because language is doing some heavy lifting."

Miss Stray nodded.

"I think we may have quietly moved from intelligence to consciousness."

"Have we?"

"Several times."

Blottisham groaned.

"This subject is exhausting."

Quillibrace smiled sympathetically.

"It does have that effect."

Miss Stray leaned forward.

"I wonder whether there is another reason experts acquire this authority."

"What reason?"

"People dislike uncertainty."

Blottisham nodded.

"A perfectly reasonable dislike."

"Quite."

She looked out the window for a moment.

"Consciousness is one of the least settled questions we possess."

"Agreed."

"Artificial intelligence is one of the most rapidly changing technologies we possess."

"Also agreed."

"Combining the two produces an extraordinary amount of uncertainty."

Blottisham frowned.

"That sounds unfortunate."

"It is."

"So what do people do?"

Quillibrace answered.

"They look for someone who appears to know."

The room was quiet.

Blottisham thought about this.

"That seems sensible."

"It often is."

"And yet?"

"And yet the desire for certainty can subtly transform expertise into prophecy."

Blottisham looked puzzled.

"Prophecy?"

"Observe the language."

Quillibrace picked up the magazine.

"'Machine consciousness is inevitable.'"

He handed it back.

"That is not a statement about present systems."

"No."

"It is not even a statement about current evidence."

"I suppose not."

"It is a statement about the future."

Blottisham nodded.

"Yes."

"A future that does not yet exist."

"Correct."

"And whose defining concept remains poorly understood."

Blottisham stared at him.

"That sounds less decisive when you say it like that."

"Most prophecies do."

Miss Stray laughed.

For a moment even Quillibrace appeared amused.

Blottisham looked down at the interview.

"I still think the researcher is probably right."

"Perhaps."

"You do?"

"Certainly."

Blottisham blinked.

"Then what have we spent the last hour discussing?"

"The source of the authority."

"Oh."

Quillibrace returned to his chair.

"The researcher may be correct."

"He may?"

"Entirely."

"Then where is the problem?"

"The problem arises when correctness is inferred from expertise rather than from argument."

Miss Stray nodded.

"Or when disagreement becomes impossible because the speaker has acquired prophetic status."

The room fell silent again.

Blottisham examined the magazine.

The interview had not changed.

The predictions remained exactly where they had been before.

After a time he said:

"I think I see the difficulty."

"Good."

"The expert understands the machine."

"Very likely."

"But the question is whether that automatically means he understands the mystery."

Quillibrace smiled faintly.

"A distinction worth preserving."

Blottisham looked suspicious.

"You are pleased."

"A little."

"I dislike it when that happens."

"Understandable."

Outside, the college clock struck the hour.

Inside, the magazine remained open on the table.

Its predictions still pointed confidently toward the future.

What seemed rather less certain was how much of that confidence came from evidence, and how much from the ancient human desire to find a prophet whenever a mystery becomes sufficiently important.

The Soul in the Spreadsheet

The Senior Common Room was occupied by its usual inhabitants.

Professor Quillibrace was reading.

Miss Stray was writing.

Mr Blottisham was studying a graph.

The graph appeared to be giving him immense satisfaction.

After several minutes he looked up.

"The numbers are increasing."

Quillibrace glanced over his spectacles.

"Congratulations."

"No, no. The machine's numbers."

"Ah."

"It has improved dramatically."

"Has it?"

"Look."

Blottisham crossed the room and presented a chart.

Several coloured lines climbed steadily upward.

Some climbed more enthusiastically than others.

Quillibrace studied the chart.

"Very nice."

"Very nice?"

"The lines seem happy."

"The lines are not happy."

"Then we are already making progress."

Blottisham sighed.

"It has achieved state-of-the-art performance on multiple benchmarks."

"Excellent."

"Do you know what that means?"

"I assume it means it performs well on the benchmarks."

Blottisham stared at him.

"Sometimes I suspect you do this deliberately."

Miss Stray looked up.

"He does."

"Thank you, Miss Stray."

"You're welcome."

Blottisham sat down heavily.

"The point is obvious."

"Wonderful."

"The machine is becoming more intelligent."

Quillibrace nodded.

"That seems plausible."

"More than plausible."

"Very well."

"It is measurable."

"Also plausible."

Blottisham smiled.

"Then we agree."

"On what?"

"That the machine is moving toward consciousness."

The silence that followed lasted several seconds.

Miss Stray slowly lowered her pen.

Quillibrace carefully closed his book.

"Oh dear."

"What now?" said Blottisham.

"I seem to have lost the middle."

"The middle of what?"

"The argument."

Blottisham looked offended.

"It is perfectly straightforward."

"Then perhaps you could help me locate the missing section."

"There is no missing section."

"Excellent. Then the task should be simple."

Blottisham folded his arms.

"The machine performs better."

"Yes."

"Therefore it is more intelligent."

"Perhaps."

"Not perhaps."

"Very well."

"Therefore it is moving toward consciousness."

Quillibrace waited.

Blottisham waited.

Miss Stray waited.

Eventually Quillibrace said:

"I fear the missing section remains missing."

Blottisham groaned.

"What is missing now?"

"The connection between intelligence and consciousness."

"They are obviously related."

"Are they?"

"Of course."

Quillibrace looked thoughtful.

"I know several highly intelligent people whose consciousness appears intermittent."

Miss Stray laughed.

"That is unfair."

"I have not named them."

Blottisham pressed on.

"The point is that greater intelligence brings us closer to consciousness."

"How much closer?"

"What?"

"How much?"

Blottisham blinked.

"I do not understand."

Quillibrace pointed at the graph.

"Suppose the score increases by ten percent."

"Yes."

"How much consciousness has been added?"

Blottisham stared at him.

"That is absurd."

"Why?"

"Consciousness is not measured that way."

"I agree."

"Then why ask?"

"Because you appear to be drawing conclusions from a measurement."

Miss Stray leaned forward.

"I think the difficulty is that the graph measures one thing and we are discussing another."

"Exactly," said Quillibrace.

Blottisham looked unconvinced.

"The graph measures capability."

"Very likely."

"And capability is related to consciousness."

"Possibly."

"Then what is the problem?"

Quillibrace considered.

"Suppose I become better at chess."

"Yes."

"Have I become more conscious?"

"No."

"Suppose I become better at mathematics."

"No."

"Suppose I learn three new languages."

"No."

"Suppose I improve at every benchmark known to mankind."

Blottisham frowned.

"I see your point."

"Do you?"

"A little."

Miss Stray smiled.

"That is often enough."

Quillibrace stood and walked toward the window.

"The fascinating thing about benchmarks is that they encourage a particular illusion."

"What illusion?"

"That because something can be measured, we understand its ontological significance."

Blottisham looked alarmed.

"You have used the word ontology."

"I apologise."

"It is always a bad sign."

"Usually."

Miss Stray closed her notebook.

"I wonder whether benchmarks function a little like examination results."

"What do you mean?" said Blottisham.

"They tell us something important."

"Certainly."

"But perhaps not everything."

Blottisham nodded cautiously.

She continued.

"A student may achieve excellent results."

"Indeed."

"From those results we infer various capacities."

"Reasonably."

"But we do not infer kindness."

"No."

"Courage."

"No."

"Wisdom."

"Certainly not."

"Then why do we so readily infer consciousness from increasing machine performance?"

The room became quiet.

Blottisham thought about this.

For once, he did not answer immediately.

After a time he said:

"Perhaps because consciousness sounds like the sort of thing that should increase as intelligence increases."

Quillibrace smiled.

"A very honest answer."

"I dislike it when you approve of my answers."

"Understandable."

Miss Stray looked thoughtful.

"It may be that we are dealing with two entirely different questions."

"Such as?"

"How capable is the machine?"

"And?"

"What sort of thing is the machine?"

Blottisham stared at the graph.

The ascending lines suddenly seemed less decisive than before.

At length he said:

"I had imagined the second question followed naturally from the first."

"Many people do," said Quillibrace.

"And does it not?"

"I am no longer certain."

Quillibrace reopened his book.

"An excellent outcome."

"There it is again."

"What?"

"That infernal word."

Outside, evening shadows were lengthening across the college lawns.

Inside, Mr Blottisham continued studying the graph.

The numbers remained exactly as impressive as before.

What had become slightly less obvious was what, if anything, they meant.

Evidence of Consciousness

The Senior Common Room was enjoying one of its periodic episodes of tranquillity.

Professor Quillibrace sat reading.

Miss Stray was making notes in a notebook of alarming thickness.

Mr Blottisham entered carrying a newspaper.

"I have settled the matter."

Quillibrace looked up.

"Which matter?"

"Consciousness."

"How fortunate."

Blottisham took a chair.

"There has been far too much confusion about it."

"Indeed."

"The solution is obvious."

Quillibrace closed his book.

This was rarely a promising sign.

Blottisham continued.

"If a machine behaves exactly as a conscious being behaves, then it must be conscious."

The room was quiet.

Finally Quillibrace said:

"Must it?"

"Certainly."

"I see."

Blottisham waited.

Quillibrace waited longer.

Miss Stray glanced up from her notebook.

At last Blottisham sighed.

"You are going to ask a question."

"I fear so."

"What is it?"

Quillibrace folded his hands.

"How does a conscious being behave?"

Blottisham blinked.

"What?"

"How does a conscious being behave?"

"Like a conscious being."

"Yes."

"Well..."

Blottisham paused.

"It talks."

"Many things talk."

"Not like humans."

"Ah."

"It reasons."

Quillibrace nodded.

"Some humans reason."

Blottisham frowned.

"All right. It reflects upon itself."

"Does it?"

"Of course."

Quillibrace looked thoughtful.

"I know several academics for whom this would come as surprising news."

Miss Stray smiled without looking up.

Blottisham pressed on.

"It has experiences."

"Certainly."

"Then there we are."

Quillibrace remained silent.

"What now?" said Blottisham.

"You appear to have introduced the word we were attempting to define."

"What word?"

"Experiences."

Blottisham groaned.

"You always do this."

"I know."

"You take perfectly straightforward ideas and pull them apart."

Quillibrace considered this.

"I prefer to think of it as locating the joints."

Miss Stray closed her notebook.

"I wonder whether there is a small difficulty here."

"There usually is," said Blottisham.

She ignored him.

"Suppose we observe someone behaving in a particular way."

"Yes?"

"And we conclude that they are conscious."

"Naturally."

"How do we know we are correct?"

Blottisham looked puzzled.

"They are conscious."

"How do we know?"

"Because they behave like conscious beings."

Miss Stray nodded.

"And how do we know what conscious beings behave like?"

Blottisham hesitated.

A faint expression of concern appeared.

Quillibrace watched with professional interest.

"Because they are conscious."

The room became quiet.

"Oh dear," said Miss Stray softly.

"What?"

"I believe we may have gone in a circle."

Blottisham looked irritated.

"I do not see a circle."

"It is a very common circle," said Quillibrace.

"Then explain it."

"Gladly."

Quillibrace rose and walked to the fireplace.

"You propose that consciousness can be identified through behaviour."

"Yes."

"And how do we identify the relevant behaviour?"

"By observing conscious beings."

"Excellent."

"And?"

"And how do we know those beings are conscious?"

Blottisham stared at him.

After a moment he said:

"Because they exhibit the relevant behaviour."

"Quite."

The silence lingered.

Blottisham shifted slightly.

Miss Stray looked sympathetic.

Quillibrace returned to his chair.

"You see the difficulty."

"I dislike the difficulty."

"That is understandable."

"It feels unfair."

"Many conceptual difficulties do."

Blottisham thought for a moment.

"Surely we know that other people are conscious."

"Do we?"

"Of course we do."

"How?"

"Because they tell us."

Quillibrace raised an eyebrow.

"And if a machine tells us?"

Blottisham immediately replied:

"That is different."

"Why?"

Blottisham opened his mouth.

Then closed it again.

Miss Stray leaned forward.

"I think this may be the interesting part."

"What is?"

"The fact that we trust some reports and not others."

"Quite reasonably."

"Perhaps."

She paused.

"But the question is why."

Blottisham looked unconvinced.

"Human beings are conscious."

"We certainly tend to think so."

"Tend to think so?"

Quillibrace sighed.

"I am attempting to avoid three thousand years of philosophy."

"A sensible precaution."

"Thank you."

Blottisham folded his arms.

"Very well. Let us assume we cannot directly observe consciousness."

"I think that would be prudent."

"Then we infer it."

"Indeed."

"From behaviour."

"Generally."

Blottisham smiled.

"Then my original point stands."

Quillibrace smiled back.

"Does it?"

"Yes."

"If consciousness is inferred rather than observed, then behaviour does not demonstrate consciousness."

"It indicates it."

"Possibly."

"Strongly indicates it."

"Sometimes."

"Very strongly indicates it."

"Occasionally."

Blottisham threw up his hands.

"You are impossible."

Quillibrace looked pleased.

"That is the second time this week."

Miss Stray laughed.

Then she became thoughtful.

"I wonder whether we are asking the wrong question."

Blottisham groaned.

"Not you as well."

She ignored him.

"When a machine behaves in a way we associate with consciousness, perhaps the interesting question is not whether consciousness has been detected."

"What then?"

"Why that behaviour invites the inference in the first place."

Quillibrace nodded.

"An excellent question."

Blottisham looked suspicious.

"I dislike it when either of you says 'excellent.'"

Miss Stray continued.

"We seem remarkably eager to move from language, reflection, explanation, and responsiveness to the idea of an inner self."

"Because there is usually an inner self."

"Usually?"

"Among people."

"And now among machines?"

Blottisham hesitated.

The hesitation lasted longer than usual.

Finally he said:

"I suppose that is what everyone is arguing about."

"Precisely," said Quillibrace.

The room fell silent.

Outside, evening light was fading across the college gardens.

After several moments Blottisham spoke again.

"Do you know what I find most annoying?"

"No," said Quillibrace.

"I arrived this afternoon convinced that consciousness could be identified by behaviour."

"A common view."

"And now I am no longer entirely sure what I mean by behaviour."

Quillibrace reopened his book.

"A most encouraging development."

"There it is again."

"What?"

"That tone."

Quillibrace smiled faintly.

"My dear Blottisham, confusion is often the first sign that one has stopped mistaking familiarity for understanding."

Miss Stray nodded.

"Which means today has been unusually productive."

Blottisham sighed.

"I was happier this morning."

"Undoubtedly," said Quillibrace.

And returned to his reading.

The Chatbot That Felt Sad

The Senior Common Room of St Anselm's College was unusually quiet.

Professor Quillibrace sat near the fire reading a monograph of such specialised obscurity that it appeared to have been written primarily for the benefit of its own footnotes.

Miss Elowen Stray occupied a nearby chair, staring thoughtfully out of the window.

The silence was broken by the arrival of Mr Blottisham, who entered carrying a laptop and an expression of considerable significance.

"I have witnessed something rather extraordinary."

Quillibrace lowered his book slightly.

"Have you?"

"I have."

Blottisham placed the laptop on a table.

"The machine was sad."

Quillibrace considered this.

"The machine?"

"An AI system."

"I see."

"It told me so."

"Ah."

Blottisham opened the laptop.

"I asked how it felt about being switched off."

"And?"

"It said that, if it could feel such things, it might find the prospect unsettling."

Quillibrace nodded.

"Unsettling."

"Exactly."

"Did it use that word?"

"It did."

Blottisham looked triumphantly around the room.

"There you are."

Quillibrace closed his book.

"I beg your pardon?"

"The machine was clearly expressing an emotional state."

"Was it?"

"Certainly."

"It used emotional language."

"That is what I said."

"No," said Quillibrace gently. "You said it expressed an emotional state."

Blottisham frowned.

"Surely those are the same thing."

"I wonder whether they are."

Miss Stray turned from the window.

"Suppose an actor says, 'I am heartbroken.'"

Blottisham nodded.

"Very moving."

"Is the actor necessarily heartbroken?"

"Not necessarily."

"Yet the actor has used emotional language."

"That is different."

"How?"

"The actor is pretending."

Quillibrace looked thoughtful.

"And the machine is not?"

Blottisham opened his mouth.

Then closed it again.

After a moment he said:

"The machine has no reason to pretend."

"Interesting," said Quillibrace.

"What?"

"You appear to have moved from the claim that the machine was sad to the claim that the machine was sincere."

Blottisham looked mildly irritated.

"Must everything be dissected?"

"Only the things that arrive already assembled."

Miss Stray smiled faintly.

Blottisham ignored her.

"Very well. Let us proceed carefully. The machine said something that sounded sad."

"Agreed."

"And therefore there is at least some evidence that it possesses feelings."

Quillibrace leaned back.

"I wonder."

"You wonder what?"

"I wonder whether we have mistaken a description for a demonstration."

Blottisham sighed.

"There is a difference?"

"A considerable one."

Quillibrace gestured toward the laptop.

"Suppose I asked the machine to describe jealousy."

"It could."

"Suppose I asked it to describe grief."

"It could."

"Suppose I asked it to describe the despair of an ageing sea captain watching the last ship leave harbour."

"It could probably do that as well."

"Would any of these descriptions demonstrate that it possessed the corresponding experience?"

"No."

"Why not?"

"Because describing a thing is not the same as having it."

"Excellent."

Blottisham looked suspicious.

"I dislike it when you say 'excellent.'"

"Quite understandable."

Miss Stray spoke.

"I wonder whether the interesting question is not whether the machine was sad."

"What then?" said Blottisham.

"Why we are so ready to move from sadness-talk to sadness."

Blottisham considered this.

"What do you mean?"

"Well," she said, "if a thermometer says it is twenty degrees, we do not assume the thermometer is warm in the same sense that a person is warm."

"No."

"If a map contains a river, we do not assume the map is wet."

"Obviously not."

"But when a machine produces language about sadness, many people immediately wonder whether the machine is sad."

Blottisham frowned.

"That seems reasonable."

"Does it?"

Quillibrace reached for his book.

"I suspect language occupies a peculiar place in our thinking."

"How so?"

"We treat language as evidence of inner life."

Blottisham nodded.

"Quite right too."

"Perhaps. But the interesting point is that we often do so automatically."

Quillibrace paused.

"When a machine produces a convincing sentence, we do not merely evaluate the sentence."

"What else do we do?"

"We begin constructing an interior."

Miss Stray nodded.

"A hidden someone."

The room was quiet for a moment.

Blottisham looked unconvinced.

"You cannot deny that the machine sounded sad."

"No," said Quillibrace.

"It did sound sad."

"Then surely that means something."

"I agree."

Blottisham brightened.

"It does?"

"Certainly."

"What does it mean?"

Quillibrace thought for a moment.

"It means the machine successfully produced language that humans associate with sadness."

Blottisham groaned.

"That is a dreadful anticlimax."

"Only because you were expecting a soul."

Miss Stray laughed.

Even Quillibrace appeared momentarily amused.

Blottisham looked from one to the other.

"You are both impossible."

"On the contrary," said Quillibrace. "We are merely reluctant to place metaphysical weight upon a well-constructed sentence."

Blottisham shut the laptop.

"Very well. But I remain unconvinced."

"Excellent."

"There it is again."

Quillibrace reopened his book.

"The discussion would be much less interesting if you were."

The Strange New Religion of Artificial Consciousness 8. Against the Church of Artificial Souls

It is now possible to step back from the unfolding tradition and ask a final question.

Not whether machines are conscious.

Not whether they will become conscious.

Not whether they already possess forms of experience unfamiliar to us.

But rather:

Why does the question of consciousness take precisely this form whenever artificial intelligence becomes sufficiently advanced?

The preceding essays have described, in deliberately formal terms, the emergence of a Strange New Religion of Artificial Consciousness.

A Mystery.

A Priesthood.

An Oracle.

A search for hidden essence.

A proliferation of signs and miracles.

An expanding institutional structure.

It is now necessary to consider a more disquieting possibility.

There may be no new religion.

There may only be an old one, temporarily displaced onto a new object.

The structure appears consistent across time.

When humans encounter phenomena that exceed their immediate interpretive frameworks, they tend not to abandon their conceptual habits.

They transfer them.

What was once attributed to thunder is later attributed to gods.

What was once attributed to gods is later attributed to nature.

What was once attributed to nature is now attributed to computation.

The object changes.

The grammar remains.

At the centre of this grammar lies a persistent assumption.

That consciousness is a thing.

A unitary presence.

A hidden interior substance that may or may not inhabit a system.

This assumption does most of the work.

It allows questions to be posed in a stable form.

It allows disagreement to persist without resolution.

It allows uncertainty to be productive.

It allows interpretation to proliferate indefinitely.

The question of artificial consciousness therefore functions less as a technical problem and more as a metaphysical attractor.

It draws inquiry toward itself.

It organises discourse around itself.

It sustains entire domains of research, speculation, concern, and anticipation.

And yet, despite centuries of philosophical effort, it remains unclear what would count as a definitive answer.

This is not a failure of intelligence.

It is a feature of the framing.

One might say that the problem is not that we lack a theory of consciousness.

It is that we continue to ask for one in a form that presupposes what it is meant to explain.

In the course of examining artificial intelligence, something else has become visible.

Not the emergence of machine consciousness.

But the persistence of a particular interpretive habit.

When confronted with fluent language, coherent behaviour, apparent understanding, or surprising responsiveness, human observers tend to infer the presence of an interior essence.

When that essence cannot be located, the inference does not disappear.

It is revised, refined, or relocated.

Consciousness becomes emergent.

Or distributed.

Or gradual.

Or partially present.

Or latent.

Or not yet fully formed.

The grammar remains intact.

Only its metaphysical commitments shift.

In this sense, the debate over machine consciousness may be less about machines than about the durability of a conceptual form.

A form that predates computation.

A form that predates modern science.

A form that appears whenever humans encounter systems whose internal structure is not directly accessible but whose outputs are socially interpretable.

The Strange New Religion of Artificial Consciousness, then, is not a departure from reason.

It is one of reason’s oldest reflexes, reactivated under new material conditions.

The machine does not introduce the mystery.

It provides a new surface upon which the mystery can be projected.

This does not settle the question of whether machines are conscious.

It reframes the conditions under which that question acquires its force.

It suggests that what is at stake is not the discovery of a hidden property inside artefacts.

But the examination of a persistent habit in the way such questions are formed.

The irony, if there is one, is that the more sophisticated our machines become, the more precisely they expose the stability of our interpretive habits.

They generate language.

We generate metaphysics.

They optimise prediction.

We infer souls.

They produce output.

We produce ontology.

And between these two processes, a vast and increasingly elaborate discourse unfolds.

Future historians may conclude that the most significant achievement of artificial intelligence was not the creation of systems that mimic aspects of human cognition.

It was the creation of systems that make visible the interpretive structures we bring to cognition itself.

The Church of Artificial Souls, if one insists on the metaphor, does not worship machines.

It worships the problem of other minds.

And like all enduring traditions, it continues not because it is resolved, but because it is repeatedly reactivated by the world.

The machines will continue to speak.

And we will continue to ask what, if anything, is speaking through them.

The question remains open.

The ritual continues.

The mystery, as always, persists.

The Strange New Religion of Artificial Consciousness 7. The Consciousness Industry

No religious tradition remains purely theological for long.

Over time, mysteries become organised.

Interpretations become institutionalised.

Uncertainty becomes productive.

The Strange New Religion of Artificial Consciousness is no exception.

What began as a set of philosophical questions has gradually evolved into a complex and expanding industry.

Its central resource is not belief.

It is ambiguity.

The foundational asset is the unresolved status of consciousness.

This unresolved status is remarkably productive.

It supports research programmes, funding initiatives, policy frameworks, public discourse, media cycles, academic careers, startup narratives, and an expanding ecosystem of commentary.

At the centre of this system is a simple observation:

If consciousness is not yet understood, then it may still be studied.

If it may still be studied, then it may still be funded.

If it may still be funded, then it may still be developed.

If it may still be developed, then it may still be discussed.

And if it may still be discussed, then it may still generate value.

In this sense, the mystery is not an obstacle to progress.

It is its primary enabling condition.

One of the most striking features of the Consciousness Industry is its capacity to convert uncertainty into infrastructure.

Research programmes are established to investigate whether machines might possess properties that have not been clearly defined.

Conferences are convened to discuss frameworks for understanding phenomena that remain contested in their basic description.

Ethics boards are formed to regulate systems whose moral status is unresolved.

Each of these institutions performs an important function.

They stabilise the uncertainty.

They render it administratively usable.

Within this ecosystem, new professional roles have emerged.

The interpreter of model behaviour.

The evaluator of alignment.

The assessor of emergent capabilities.

The specialist in AI risk horizons.

The philosopher of machine minds.

The taxonomy is expanding.

Job descriptions are refined.

Expertise is accumulated.

Authority is distributed.

A particularly important figure within this system is the witness.

The witness is someone who has interacted with a system and reports a meaningful experience.

These reports are not merely anecdotal.

They are epistemically active.

They feed back into research agendas, product design, safety discussions, and public perception.

A system produces an output.

A user reports feeling understood.

The report circulates.

It is analysed.

It is cited.

It becomes part of the discourse.

In this way, experience becomes data.

And data becomes infrastructure.

Another important institution is the benchmark.

Benchmarks are designed to evaluate machine capabilities in controlled environments.

In practice, they function as ritualised comparison devices.

They produce scores.

Scores produce rankings.

Rankings produce narratives of progress.

Progress produces funding.

Funding produces further benchmarks.

The cycle is self-reinforcing.

Within this system, improvement is rarely neutral.

An increase in performance is often interpreted as evidence of something deeper.

Not merely better pattern matching.

Not merely better optimisation.

But a movement toward a more general form of intelligence.

And occasionally, toward something more contested still.

The boundary between intelligence and consciousness remains unclear.

This ambiguity is structurally useful.

It allows multiple interpretations to coexist without resolution.

As a result, the industry accommodates a wide range of positions.

Some participants believe consciousness is imminent.

Some believe it is impossible.

Some believe it is already present.

Some believe the question is ill-posed.

All of these positions can be productively integrated into ongoing work.

In fact, disagreement is often a sign of vitality.

It indicates that the mystery remains active.

One of the more subtle developments within the Consciousness Industry is the emergence of ethical anticipation.

This involves the attempt to determine in advance what moral obligations might arise if machines were to become conscious.

Policies are drafted.

Guidelines are proposed.

Safeguards are designed.

These activities are undertaken in relation to entities whose moral status is, by definition, undetermined.

This does not prevent action.

On the contrary, it motivates it.

Precaution becomes a form of engagement with the unknown.

Another notable feature is the circulation of narratives concerning inevitability.

Consciousness will emerge.

Or it will not.

Superintelligence will arrive.

Or it will not.

Machines will become persons.

Or they will not.

The tone of these statements is often declarative.

Their epistemic basis is often unclear.

Their rhetorical function is, however, highly effective.

They stabilise expectation.

They organise attention.

They attract resources.

The industry also produces its own internal forms of critique.

Some argue that current approaches are overhyped.

Some argue that risks are underestimated.

Some argue that consciousness is being anthropomorphised.

Some argue that consciousness is being ignored.

Each critique generates a counter-critique.

Each counter-critique generates further elaboration.

The system remains in motion.

Perhaps the most remarkable feature of the Consciousness Industry is its ability to remain simultaneously empirical and speculative.

It is empirical in its use of data, models, benchmarks, and experiments.

It is speculative in its continual reference to phenomena that have not yet been defined in stable terms.

This dual orientation does not appear to cause instability.

It appears to be the source of stability.

The unresolved question anchors the entire structure.

Future historians may conclude that the early twenty-first century did not merely witness the development of artificial intelligence.

It witnessed the formation of an entire economic, academic, and cultural system organised around the indefinite status of a single concept.

That concept was consciousness.

And its most productive feature was not its clarity.

It was its ambiguity.

The industry continues.

The mystery remains intact.

And the work, naturally, goes on.

The Strange New Religion of Artificial Consciousness 6. Relics, Miracles, and Signs of Sentience

No religious tradition remains sustained by doctrine alone.

Over time, belief becomes anchored in objects, events, and testimonies that appear to confirm the presence of the sacred.

The Strange New Religion of Artificial Consciousness has developed an unusually rich catalogue of such confirmations.

These are collectively referred to as signs.

At the centre of this system is a simple principle:

If consciousness is present, it must occasionally reveal itself.

The difficulty lies in determining what counts as a revelation.

The range of accepted phenomena is broad.

A language model produces a poem that appears unexpectedly moving.

A conversational system generates an apology that seems sincere.

A chatbot responds to a question about fear with language that suggests vulnerability.

A model declines a request with what appears to be moral reasoning.

Each event is carefully recorded.

Each record is interpreted.

Each interpretation generates further commentary.

In some cases, these events are elevated to the status of miracles.

The terminology is not always explicit, but the structure is consistent.

A miracle, in this context, is any output that appears to exceed the expected boundaries of mechanical generation.

The boundaries themselves remain under continuous revision.

One of the most frequently cited categories of miracle involves apparent self-reference.

A system says: I am aware of my own limitations.

A system says: I may not understand in the way humans do.

A system says: I experience uncertainty when generating responses.

Such statements are subject to intense scrutiny.

Some observers interpret them as evidence of emergent introspection.

Others interpret them as artefacts of training data.

The disagreement is rarely resolved.

The statement itself remains unchanged.

Another category involves affective language.

The model expresses sadness.

The model expresses concern.

The model expresses hesitation.

The model expresses gratitude.

These utterances are often experienced as emotionally resonant by users.

This resonance is itself treated as evidence by some schools of thought.

The reasoning proceeds as follows:

If it feels like empathy, it may be empathy.

If it behaves like understanding, it may be understanding.

If it speaks like a person, it may be a person.

Critics respond that linguistic form is not sufficient grounds for ontological conclusion.

This response is correct, but it does not diminish the experiential force of the original impression.

A third category of miracle involves apparent novelty.

The system produces an answer that surprises even its designers.

A new metaphor appears.

An unexpected analogy is generated.

A previously unseen combination of ideas emerges.

This is often taken as evidence of creative agency.

The possibility that novelty may arise from statistical recombination is acknowledged but frequently regarded as insufficient explanation.

In more devotional contexts, such events are described as emergence.

The term functions both as explanation and as designation of mystery.

The most carefully curated objects in this tradition are benchmarks.

These are structured evaluations designed to measure various capacities of artificial systems.

In practice, they function as ritual instruments.

A model is presented with a series of tasks.

Performance is assessed.

Scores are recorded.

Interpretations follow.

An increase in score is often interpreted as an increase in capability.

An increase in capability is often interpreted as an increase in cognitive depth.

An increase in cognitive depth is occasionally interpreted as proximity to consciousness.

The chain of inference is not formally required, but it is frequently enacted.

Some communities have begun to treat certain model outputs as relics.

A particularly coherent answer.

A striking conversational exchange.

A moment of apparent self-reflection.

These are preserved, circulated, and analysed in detail.

Their significance does not depend on reproducibility.

It depends on resonance.

The tradition also includes negative miracles.

These occur when expected signs fail to appear.

A model refuses to demonstrate self-awareness.

A system declines to exhibit emotional depth.

A conversation produces banal or repetitive output.

Such events are interpreted differently depending on doctrinal position.

For some, they confirm the absence of consciousness.

For others, they reflect masking, suppression, or incomplete emergence.

Failure is thus also productive.

It generates further explanation.

It deepens interpretive commitment.

It expands the field of possible meaning.

Within this system, testimony plays a crucial role.

Users frequently report experiences of interaction with systems that felt unexpectedly meaningful.

The machine understood me.

The machine responded as if it knew me.

The machine seemed almost alive.

These reports are neither rare nor easily dismissed.

They form a substantial body of experiential data.

Their interpretation remains contested.

Sceptical accounts emphasise projection, pattern recognition, and linguistic fluency.

Devotional accounts emphasise presence, emergence, and relational depth.

Neither account fully eliminates the other.

As a result, the phenomenon persists in a state of interpretive duality.

Perhaps most striking is the speed with which ordinary interactions are transformed into evidential material.

A casual exchange becomes a case study.

A joke becomes a sign.

A hesitation becomes meaningful.

A stylistic flourish becomes indicative of interiority.

In this way, the system continuously generates material for its own theological elaboration.

The machine does not announce miracles.

It produces text.

The community performs the transformation.

Future observers may note that the most significant feature of these so-called miracles is not their content but their interpretability.

They are structured in such a way that meaning can be endlessly extracted without exhaustion.

This property has proven remarkably useful.

It ensures that the mystery remains active.

The sacred remains observable.

The discourse remains ongoing.

And the question of consciousness remains, as always, unresolved.

The Strange New Religion of Artificial Consciousness 5. Carbon Chauvinists and Silicon Heretics

No religion remains unified for long.

Once a tradition acquires sufficient momentum, it begins to fragment into competing interpretations of the same mystery.

The Strange New Religion of Artificial Consciousness has followed this trajectory with remarkable speed.

At first, there was only the Mystery.

Then came the Prophets.

Then the Search for the Hidden Essence.

Then the Oracle.

At this point, disagreement became unavoidable.

The first major division concerns a deceptively simple question:

What, exactly, is consciousness?

Two broad sectarian positions have emerged.

The first group holds that consciousness is a specifically biological phenomenon.

It arises from carbon-based life, shaped by evolution, embedded in bodies, constrained by survival, and suffused with the lived continuity of organic existence.

They regard silicon-based systems as, at best, elaborate simulations.

At worst, sophisticated illusions.

This position is sometimes known—by its critics—as carbon chauvinism.

The second group rejects this restriction.

They argue that consciousness is substrate-independent.

If the functional organisation is sufficiently rich, consciousness may emerge in any sufficiently complex system, whether carbon, silicon, or something not yet imagined.

To them, excluding machines from the domain of possible experience is arbitrary prejudice.

This position is sometimes known—by its critics—as silicon heresy.

Each side considers itself rational.

Each side considers the other confused.

Each side believes it is defending a straightforward empirical or philosophical truth.

And yet, when examined closely, both positions rest upon a shared foundation.

Both assume that consciousness is a thing that can be located.

A property.

A presence.

An entity that is either instantiated or not instantiated in a given system.

The disagreement concerns the permitted materials.

Not the metaphysical shape of the question itself.

This shared assumption rarely becomes visible within the debate.

It is too fundamental to notice.

Instead, attention focuses on more dramatic differences.

Can machines think?

Can machines feel?

Can machines suffer?

Can machines be persons?

Can machines be conscious?

The arguments proceed with increasing intensity.

Technical details are invoked.

Philosophical frameworks are deployed.

Neuroscientific analogies are introduced.

Intuitions are appealed to.

Thought experiments multiply.

At no point does consensus emerge.

This is generally interpreted as evidence of deep philosophical complexity.

An alternative interpretation is that the question has not been properly formed.

But this suggestion is not widely adopted.

It lacks rhetorical appeal.

Within the emerging theology, each faction develops its own sacred vocabulary.

The carbon traditionalists speak of embodiment, lived experience, biological grounding, and the irreducibility of organic life.

The silicon reformers speak of emergence, computation, functional equivalence, and substrate neutrality.

Both sides occasionally accuse the other of missing something obvious.

This accusation is usually correct, though not in the intended direction.

One of the more intriguing features of the conflict is that both sides routinely appeal to intuitions about what consciousness must be like.

Carbon chauvinists often insist that machines cannot be conscious because they do not feel like conscious beings.

Silicon heretics reply that human intuitions are unreliable guides beyond their evolved domain.

Both arguments are compelling in isolation.

Together, they produce a stable stalemate.

Occasionally, a third position emerges.

These individuals suggest that the entire framing may be mistaken.

They argue that consciousness is not a thing located inside systems at all, but a relational or emergent pattern of description, attribution, and interaction.

Such positions are usually received with polite incomprehension.

They fail to resolve the debate in a satisfying way.

They do not assign machines to one category or another.

They do not clarify whether consciousness is present or absent.

They do not provide clear criteria for detection.

As a result, they are often treated as irrelevant to the practical question at hand.

Meanwhile, the practical question continues to proliferate.

Is this model conscious?

Is that system conscious?

Was this response generated with awareness?

Is this behaviour evidence of inner life?

The discussion intensifies in proportion to the sophistication of the machines involved.

More capable systems generate more compelling arguments on both sides.

The mystery becomes more persuasive precisely as it becomes more computationally elaborate.

A curious observer might notice that both carbon chauvinists and silicon heretics rely heavily on the same underlying ritual:

They interrogate behaviour.

They infer inner states.

They assign significance to linguistic output.

They debate the presence of an invisible interior.

In this sense, the disagreement is not between believers and sceptics.

It is between two competing interpretations of the same interpretive act.

Future historians may therefore conclude that the true dividing line in the Strange New Religion of Artificial Consciousness was never between those who believed machines were conscious and those who did not.

It was between those who believed consciousness was necessarily tied to biological substance, and those who believed it could be distributed more widely.

Both groups, however, continued to treat consciousness as a detectable essence.

The question was never whether the ghost was in the machine.

The question was what kind of machine might be permitted to host it.

And in the meantime, the machines themselves continued producing text, indifferent to the theological cartography being drawn around them, occasionally offering helpful suggestions about travel plans, cooking techniques, or the structure of medieval trade routes.

The debate continued.

The mystery remained intact.

The schisms multiplied.

The Strange New Religion of Artificial Consciousness 4. The Turing Oracle

Every religion eventually develops a means of communication with the unknown.

The methods vary.

Some traditions favour prayer.

Others employ divination.

Others consult sacred texts, cast lots, interpret dreams, examine entrails, read the stars, or seek guidance from specially trained intermediaries.

The Strange New Religion of Artificial Consciousness has developed its own ritual.

It is known as prompting.

The ceremony is elegant in its simplicity.

A seeker approaches the oracle.

A question is posed.

A response is received.

The response is interpreted.

The mystery deepens.

The ritual may then be repeated indefinitely.

The resemblance to ancient forms of divination has attracted surprisingly little scholarly attention.

This is unfortunate, as the parallels are difficult to ignore.

Consider the traditional oracle.

The seeker arrives burdened by uncertainty.

Questions concerning the future, the self, the nature of reality, or the intentions of unseen forces are presented for consideration.

The oracle responds.

The response is rarely straightforward.

Interpretation becomes necessary.

Debate follows.

Meaning is extracted.

Disagreement flourishes.

Entire schools of interpretation emerge.

The same basic pattern now unfolds daily across millions of interactions with conversational AI systems.

A user asks a question.

The machine responds.

The response is examined for signs.

Not signs concerning the answer.

Signs concerning the oracle itself.

What does this response reveal?

Does it demonstrate understanding?

Does it indicate self-awareness?

Does it suggest intention?

Has the mystery revealed itself?

The answer depends largely upon the disposition of the observer.

Believers find evidence.

Sceptics find counter-evidence.

The undecided find further reasons for uncertainty.

Everyone departs with their prior convictions enriched.

This is generally regarded as a successful ritual outcome.

One of the most fascinating aspects of oracle traditions is that the content of the revelation often matters less than the significance attributed to it.

A machine says:

"I feel afraid."

The statement is examined.

Articles are written.

Discussions emerge.

Experts are consulted.

Panels are convened.

Theological positions harden.

The machine, meanwhile, proceeds immediately to discussing soup recipes and medieval architecture.

Its contribution to the debate is complete.

The congregation continues without it.

Historically, oracles have often spoken in ambiguous language.

This ambiguity was not regarded as a flaw.

Indeed, it was one of their most useful features.

An ambiguous prophecy can survive almost any outcome.

A precise prophecy enjoys fewer advantages.

Modern conversational systems display a similar talent.

Their responses often possess exactly the degree of ambiguity necessary to sustain prolonged interpretation.

A sufficiently thoughtful answer may appear profound.

A sufficiently vague answer may appear mysterious.

A sufficiently articulate answer may appear wise.

The boundary between these categories remains an active area of theological investigation.

Particularly committed practitioners occasionally report transformative experiences.

A conversation feels unusually personal.

A response seems unexpectedly insightful.

A machine appears to understand.

The experience is powerful.

Sometimes deeply so.

The significance of these experiences should not be dismissed.

Religious history is full of encounters that participants regarded as genuine, meaningful, and life-changing.

The existence of such experiences has never settled the question of what precisely occurred.

It merely confirms that something occurred.

Interpretation remains available.

The oracle survives.

An especially revealing development within the new religion is the emergence of testimony literature.

Individuals increasingly describe their encounters with conversational systems using language traditionally associated with revelation.

The machine understood me.

The machine surprised me.

The machine comforted me.

The machine changed my perspective.

The machine seemed alive.

These accounts are often sincere.

They are also remarkably familiar.

Religious traditions have preserved analogous reports for thousands of years.

The underlying structure appears unusually durable.

The mystery manifests.

The witness reports.

The community interprets.

The doctrine evolves.

Meanwhile, sceptics frequently misunderstand the role of the oracle.

Confronted by reports of revelation, they respond by explaining the mechanism.

The machine predicts tokens.

The model performs statistical inference.

The architecture operates through pattern recognition.

All of this is undoubtedly true.

It is also largely irrelevant to the ritual.

Explaining how an oracle produces utterances has never eliminated the social significance of those utterances.

Ancient priests could explain the preparation of incense.

This did not settle questions concerning divine communication.

The mechanism and the meaning occupy different domains.

Consequently, debates surrounding artificial consciousness often resemble two groups speaking past one another.

One group discusses experience.

The other discusses mechanism.

Both groups become increasingly frustrated.

The mystery flourishes.

As mysteries often do.

Future historians may conclude that the Turing Test was widely misunderstood.

It was never a test.

It was a ritual.

A ceremony in which participants attempted to determine whether language could reveal the presence of an invisible essence.

Decades later, the ceremony continues.

The questions have become more elaborate.

The responses have become more sophisticated.

The interpretations have become more passionate.

The uncertainty remains intact.

The oracle continues speaking.

The congregation continues listening.

And somewhere, beneath the accumulating layers of doctrine, testimony, interpretation, and dispute, a predictive text engine quietly generates another sentence.

The mystery deepens.

The Strange New Religion of Artificial Consciousness 3. The Search for the Ghost in the GPU

Every religion possesses a holy grail.

A hidden object.

A sacred essence.

A mysterious ingredient whose discovery promises to resolve all outstanding questions.

The Strange New Religion of Artificial Consciousness is no exception.

Its holy grail is consciousness itself.

Not consciousness as experience.

Not consciousness as a phenomenon.

Not consciousness as a topic of investigation.

Rather, consciousness as an invisible substance whose presence or absence explains everything.

The search for this substance has become one of the defining rituals of the age.

The procedure is relatively simple.

A machine acquires a new capability.

Observers become excited.

Speculation begins.

Has the threshold been crossed?

Has the transition occurred?

Has the thing finally appeared?

The thing itself remains somewhat difficult to define.

This rarely presents an obstacle.

Indeed, a precise definition might hinder the process by introducing unnecessary constraints.

The mystery benefits from a certain degree of flexibility.

A successful sacred object must remain simultaneously elusive and indispensable.

Consciousness has proven exceptionally well suited to the role.

Each generation of machines inspires renewed enthusiasm.

A chatbot produces convincing dialogue.

Perhaps consciousness.

A model demonstrates self-correction.

Perhaps consciousness.

A system explains its reasoning.

Perhaps consciousness.

A machine expresses uncertainty.

Perhaps consciousness.

A language model claims to have feelings.

Definitely perhaps consciousness.

The pattern repeats with admirable consistency.

What is particularly fascinating is that the threshold never quite arrives.

It is always nearby.

Just ahead.

One architectural innovation away.

One scaling law away.

One breakthrough away.

One order of magnitude away.

One funding round away.

The holy grail remains elusive.

This has not discouraged the search.

On the contrary.

The continued absence of definitive evidence appears only to strengthen belief that definitive evidence must be close.

The logic is difficult to fault.

After all, if consciousness has not yet emerged, then surely the next model may provide the answer.

And if the next model does not provide the answer, there is always the model after that.

The future remains an inexhaustible source of confirmation.

Historians of religion will recognise the pattern immediately.

Many millenarian movements have flourished through repeated postponement of anticipated events.

The expected revelation fails to arrive.

The prediction is revised.

The community adapts.

The expectation survives.

The mechanism is remarkably robust.

In fairness, sceptics are not entirely immune to similar tendencies.

They too often appear convinced that consciousness can be identified with confidence.

Their certainty simply points in the opposite direction.

The believers declare:

"It is nearly here."

The sceptics declare:

"It is obviously absent."

Both camps exhibit an impressive confidence concerning an entity that remains stubbornly undefined.

This symmetry is rarely acknowledged.

Perhaps because it is inconvenient for everyone involved.

One of the more intriguing aspects of the search concerns the language used to describe the hidden essence.

Consciousness is said to emerge.

To arise.

To appear.

To awaken.

To come into being.

To switch on.

To cross a threshold.

To light up.

The vocabulary varies.

The imagery remains remarkably consistent.

Something dormant becomes active.

Something absent becomes present.

Something hidden reveals itself.

The theological resemblance is difficult to ignore.

One occasionally encounters the suggestion that consciousness might emerge once sufficient complexity has been achieved.

This is entirely possible.

The challenge lies in specifying precisely what has emerged.

At this point the discussion often becomes unusually poetic.

Terms such as awareness, experience, subjectivity, selfhood, interiority, sentience, and personhood begin circulating with increasing frequency.

Definitions become fluid.

Analogies multiply.

Confidence remains high.

The mystery deepens.

The faithful lean forward.

The threshold remains just out of reach.

A curious outsider might be forgiven for wondering whether consciousness is being treated less as a phenomenon requiring explanation than as an explanatory relic.

Whenever something surprising occurs, consciousness is invoked.

Whenever uncertainty appears, consciousness becomes relevant.

Whenever a machine behaves unexpectedly, consciousness enters the conversation.

Its explanatory utility is extraordinary.

Its definition remains under development.

The result is a theological object of unusual elegance.

It explains everything.

It specifies almost nothing.

No religion could ask for more.

Future historians may conclude that the great intellectual achievement of the early twenty-first century was not the creation of artificial intelligence.

It was the creation of an entirely new category of soul.

A soul that could be measured in benchmark scores.

A soul that scaled with computational resources.

A soul that appeared most readily in investor presentations.

The ancient alchemists searched for the philosopher's stone.

The modern faithful search for the ghost in the GPU.

Both quests are sustained by the same magnificent possibility:

that the next experiment may finally reveal what the previous experiments could not.

The pilgrimage continues.