Based on a spooky first encounter with ChatGPT, I argue that AI is not an alien intelligence, but a machine-like mirror that reflects back our own limited ways of knowing. I draw upon Paul Kingsnorth's metaphor of “the Machine” and Shannon Vallor's “AI Mirror,” as well as the ancient Buddhist Yogācāra philosophy and Tarthang Tulku's Time, Space, and Knowledge vision. Through the lens of these resources, I argue that generative AI is what the Yogācārins refer to as prapañca, an automated form of conceptual proliferation that is now being accelerated at digital machine speeds. I illustrate the remarkable parallels between the Yogācārin and Tarthang Tulku's understanding of conceptual proliferation and “lower knowledge,” and how we have come to misunderstand the term Artificial Intelligence, equating pattern matching for deep understanding and wisdom. In addition, I pose a warning to contemplative traditions: that in this cultural moment we must be wary of contemporary forms of mindfulness and other contemplative approaches being co-opted by the tech elite. I present the notion of an ideal type, “the contemplative dissident,” which entails a fierce commitment to preserving forms of knowing that the Machine can never touch. Our task is to see clearly through the reflections of the AI mirror, and to recognize that the AI alignment problem is not technical but contemplative.
Ronald E. Purser (Thu,) studied this question.