Computer
Applications for Spirtuality
By Richard Thieme
This formal
theological essay was originally written in 1988. It was quite dated
when published by the Anglican Theological Review in 1993.
The transition
from a culture created by the technology of print to one created
by electronic processing of information is an occasion of excitement
and great opportunity as well as a time of confusion, resistance,
and pain. We can imagine that the same ambivalence characterized
the transitions from orality to literacy and from literacy to print.
Anxious efforts to retain the thinking habits of the past -- an
inevitable reaction to both the form and content of the artifacts
of the new culture -- are futile. We are well on our way toward
feeling, thinking, and perceiving in new ways.
This transition
is marked by polemics against the new technology written by polemicists
using that same technology to state their case. The arguments Plato
raised against writing - that it inappropriately externalized an
internal process, that our memories would be weakened or destroyed,
and that the written text was unnatural because it was unresponsive
and could not engage in real dialogue - were disseminated through
writing.1
In 1477, one
Hieronomo Squarciafico sounded the alarm that the growing abundance
of books was making people less studious, destroying the mind, and
weakening the memory -- and he did it in a book.2
Similar arguments
against the use of computers are written on word processors and sent
to publishers on floppy disks or via modem and marketed worldwide
through computerized industries. We use the highest forms of technology
available to critique the effects already wrought by that technology.
The emergence of a new
domain of knowing and being threatens the very foundations of society
because our modalities of perceiving, knowing, and communicating
are not incidental to our identities; on the contrary, within the
context of a particular culture, they form our identities. They
are axiomatic to our self-conscious experience of ourselves and
give us possibilities for being which are so much a part of ourselves
that we can not see them. Writing does more than "raise the consciousness"
of an oral culture; it transforms it. Plato was empowered by the
technology of writing to make radically new distinctions, including
negative judgments about writing. The interiorization of the world
of printed text formed the modern psyche in all its manifestations,
and we are in the process now of being recreated by the world of
electronic technology.
It follows that religious
experience, as one domain of human consciousness, and the modalities
of spirituality which nurture and sustain it, are being transformed
as well. I will indicate some of the possibilities for spiritual
development and religious experience engendered by the emerging
electronic culture and note some sources of inevitable resistance.
Many people fear computers. Employees often must be gently introduced
to new technology because of resistance to using the medium. Computer
jokes -- beginning with the days of "do not fold spindle or mutilate"
-- are one index of the depth of the threat posed by the technology.
Because computers, like Rorschach tests, elicit projections from
users, our conversation about computers is an image of our new selves.
One of the shrillest
cries of alarm came early on from a pioneer of artificial intelligence,
Joseph Weizenbaum of MIT. Weizenbaum created a simple program called
ELIZA, which used an elementary natural language interface to create
the illusion that the computer was engaged in meaningful conversation
with the user. ELIZA mimics a Rogerian therapist, that is, one who
follows the Carl Rogers model by feeding back to the client restatements
of his own feelings without interpretation, so the client can direct
the therapeutic process. As a caricature of such a therapist, ELIZA
restated sentences as questions by swapping pronouns and reversing
verb tense, made understanding responses such as "I see," and referred
to prior statements by responding to key words like "mother" by
scripting, "You mentioned your family - tell me more about them."
Initial users
of ELIZA projected onto the program a persona with which they subsequently
engaged as if they were in a private conversation with a therapist.
Weizenbaum was shocked when users asked him to leave the room so
they could have more privacy. He endeavored to warn us against exaggerating
the powers of computer programs in such unrealistic ways. While
he did correct some unrealistic claims being made for artificial
intelligence, I am more interested in the intensity of his own anxiety,
which drove him to warn us at book length of the dangers of a medium
he himself had helped to create.3
Both Weizenbaum
and his excited users were responding to the power of the computer
to engage users in a way that is deep and transforming. Users project
a gestalt or persona onto their experience of using a program which
both reveals themselves and creates a new dimension of consciousness
of which they immediately become aware. The exploration of this new
dimension, with its disclosure of horizon after horizon of meaning
and possibility, generates excitement analogous to that experienced
by someone learning to read.
Weizenbaum's anxiety
was elicited by a real phenomena, the creation of a new domain of
consciousness which had not previously existed. But there is another
source of anxiety as well: the apparent encroachment of a computer
program on the domain of the sacred. Psychotherapy is one context
among many in which the sacred becomes real in our society. The
psychotherapist, one contemporary analogue of the shaman, mediates
separate realities and assists in the integration of the contents
of both. To a machine that had functioned in the "cold" domains
of mathematics, science, economics and business, or statistical
branches of the social sciences, was suddenly imputed powers of
prescience and healing. Weizenbaum's reaction was out of proportion
to the phenomena he described unless it is understood in this broader
context. As computers expand the domain of religious experience,
mediating in new ways the transformative power of sacred symbols,
this anxiety is likely to become even more intense.
Artificial
intelligence threatens us with its promise to replicate not aspects
of our intelligence but us in concatenations of silicon and plastic.
Computers, however, are not sentient beings, but physical symbol
systems4
more comparable
to other processes which have technologized the word -- speech, writing,
and print -- than to living persons. Computers are indifferent to
the content of the symbols they manipulate, but we are not. When they
operate in the domain of spirituality and religion, they are more
threatening than when they crunch numbers or search a database.
Absolute authority will
no doubt be claimed for some computer programs in the same way that
we once cried, "But the book says ..." in an effort to settle a
dispute. The medium of print carried with it the illusion of self-validation
by virtue of its form and not its contents, and the same will be
true for computer programs. This simply means that a critical and
reflective sensibility is as necessary to the task of interacting
with computer programs as to reading books.
ELIZA, of course, does
not function like a real therapist. Programs like ELIZA can more
realistically be compared to workbooks than to human beings. A smart
workbook, its interactive capacity enabling the user to sort through
feelings about current issues, ELIZA in its most elementary form
was still a valuable tool. The value was provided by the intentionality
of the user, who reacted in good faith to a series of prompts and
therefore derived value from the program. The synergistic relationship
between the user and the possibilities disclosed by the program
generated the power of the transaction. Something similar happens
when "users" use journals, as in Ira Progoff's Journaling Workshops,
to explore themselves. Computer interaction simply defines a different
kind of "psychic space" as a possibility into which to grow.
The willingness of users
to operate within the narrow parameters defined by the program made
ELIZA useful within its limitations. Some users, of course, took
great delight in sabotaging the program. It was easy to figure out
ELIZA and make it say silly things. I believe the need to make ELIZA
respond in inappropriate ways is related to the degree to which
the program mimics human intelligence or a human personality, making
it threatening. A program so easily outwitted, we seem to be saying,
can not be so smart after all. Perhaps the hacker's delight in crashing
programs stems in part from the need to outsmart a medium that frightens
even the Doctors Frankenstein who have invented the technology.
Weizenbaum was taken
aback by the users' desire for privacy. Privacy as we understand
it did not exist before writing. It did not exist in an oral culture
because the particular interior world one enters when writing or
reading silently to oneself did not exist. The diary, a book that
invites confidences, creating for the user a deepening sense of
self as he or she discloses and discovers latent or potential thoughts
and feelings, is a relatively recent invention. Children given diaries
behave very much as ELIZA-users behaved because the diary, although
inviting a less intense response, is also a projective medium --
a "special friend" ("Dear Diary ...") in which one confides, keeping
one's secrets safe under lock and key. The diary could be said to
elicit the consciousness one discovers as one uses it, as a journal
elicits the contents of a psyche illuminated by the light of conscience
during self-examination. ELIZA and the more complex, more intentional
spiritual guides that will be its descendants will call into being
a kind of consciousness the contours of which we do not yet know
how to describe.
What might some of these
spiritual guides be like? An interactive program might facilitate
self-examination or guide periods of contemplation with text or
visual images during an extended Ignatian retreat. Expert systems
might assist in identifying salient issues in ethical dilemmas.
Twelve Step spirituality can be facilitated step by step by a Spiritual
Companion. Spiritual Companions and interactive Bible studies might
incorporate users' responses, integrating data so that subsequent
lessons can be illuminated by what the program has learned.
One form of Bible study
might derive from the similar processes that underlie two seemingly
disparate experiences: readings with Tarot cards and preaching from
the cycle of biblical readings in the three-year lectionary in liturgical
churches.
A Tarot card reading
consists of a random sort (shuffling) of a collection of archetypal
images, of which some are then selected and juxtaposed in a proscribed
pattern. The archetypal symbols resonate deeply with the psyches
of the reader and the seeker, calling forth from the latter memories,
feelings, and associations which it is the task of the reader to
discern. The point of departure for sermons during the Eucharist
are lessons from the Scriptures which rotate on a three-year cycle.
The lectionary also "shuffles" readings through the church year.
My own preparation for preaching consists of allowing the three
lessons (juxtaposed in a predetermined pattern) to resonate with
my own psyche and the feelings and experiences of parishioners with
whom I interact during the week, resulting in a "reading" of the
meaning of the archetypal images for the corporate personality of
the parish. Intuition is required in both cases in order to discern
the possibilities latent within the symbols for a particular person
or community. Some Bible studies also choose or sort selected passages
on which participants in a group reflect. The study is an opportunity
to discern the emotional and spiritual dimensions of their lives
insofar as they are illuminated by the archetypal stories from the
scriptures. The dynamics of all three processes -- the card reading,
the preacher preparing to preach, and the bible study -- are similar,
although different images will of course yield different contents.
Computers are uniquely suited to provide the basic material for
such an enterprise.
A computer program might
connect Biblical narratives in a variety of meaningful patterns
-- chronological or historical, metaphorical (patterns of words
or root-words, allusions or images) or thematic/theological. Even
a random search would generate clusters of meaningful patterns,
surprising and delighting us (the serendipity factor of computer
searches) as well as leading to new insights. Of course, intentionally
woven webs of metaphors or stories using Hyper-text, their complexity,
balance, and comprehensiveness coming from the combinatory or integrative
power of the imagination of the poet/programmer, would be a magnitude
of power greater than a random search. A randomly-generated meaningful
construct would still have to be identified and selected, like Hamlet
in the billionth monkey's typewriter or the one good poem among
millions produced by poetry-writing programs plugging pre-selected
words into syntactical slots. The process by which parts of the
whole are unified harmoniously -- irony, association, dramatic revelation
of human character or God's plan -- is still a task for human imagination.
The evolution
of human consciousness is marked by growth in our ability to attend
to our various selves.
5
The self we observe has become increasingly distant from the seeing
self, but the distance is transcended by virtue of new opportunities
for intimacy. We can know ourselves, others, and God only because
we have first become aware of our distance from ourselves, others,
and God. The flawed self at the heart of all symbolism of evil is
a felix culpa, an occasion of communion at a deeper level.
By separating
the knower from the thing known, writing enabled an increasingly
articulate capacity for introspection without which Judaism, Christianity,
Buddhism, and Islam would not have been possible.
6
The impact of print on religious experience was equally profound.
By making possible small portable Bibles which could be read silently
to oneself, a radically new experience of the scriptures was made
available by the new technology.
The Reformation
is unimaginable without print, but a new kind of Catholic spirituality
was engendered as well. Print ushered in a greater focus on lengthy
examination of one's conscience and more frequent confessions.
7
In the twentieth
century, traditional forms of spirituality, including self-examination
and confession, have fallen into disuse. The "death of God" as a cultural
phenomenon earlier in this century signalled the disintegration of
traditional forms of spirituality and the primacy of a secular paradigm
for the social construction of reality. Fifty years ago, however,
at the depths of the Great Depression, one model of spiritual regeneration
emerged which spoke a secular language that twentieth century human
beings could understand.
The Twelve Steps of
Alcoholics Anonymous shatters the isolation of the practicing addict
and discloses a means of integrating the fractured self. I will
discuss the Twelve Steps in some detail because (1) they are a generic
paradigm of spiritual regeneration -- a paradigm of paradigms --
which addresses not only addiction but other kinds of "sinful" behavior,
(2) they illustrate recursion as a principle of spiritual renewal,
and (3) the Twelve Steps can be readily adapted as a powerful means
of computer-assisted spiritual direction.
The Twelve Steps are:
(1) We admitted that
we were powerless over [alcohol] [death] [sin] [etc.] and that our
lives had become unmanageable.
(2) Came to believe
that a power greater than ourselves could restore us to sanity.
(3) Made a decision
to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God as we understood
Him.
(4) Made a searching
and fearless moral inventory of ourselves.
(5) Admitted to God,
to ourselves, and to another human being the exact nature of our
wrongs.
(6) Were entirely ready
to have God remove all these defects of character.
(7) Humbly asked Him
to remove our shortcomings.
(8) Made a list of all
persons we had harmed, and became willing to make amends to them
all.
(9) Made direct amends
to such people wherever possible, except when to do so would injure
them or others.
(10) Continued to take
personal inventory and when we were wrong promptly admitted it.
(11) Sought through
prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with God
as we understood Him, praying only for knowledge of His will for
us and the power to carry that out.
(12) Having had a spiritual
awakening as the result of these Steps, we tried to carry this message
to [those who still suffer], and to practice these principles in
all our affairs.
Many persons
other than the chemically dependent have used them as a guide to
recovery, recognizing that the process engendered by the twelve
steps follows the basic principles of ascetical theology for the
regeneration of the alienated self. To speak of dysfunctional or
addicted families has become a way of speaking about all of us.
It is the modern idiom into which original sin and all its consequences
has been translated. Dr. Gerald May in Addiction and Grace identifies
dozens of so-called addictions including ice cream and art, work
and golf, status and responsibility.
8
He is speaking, in effect, of any and all behaviors used to escape
from the reality of the here-and-now and a real relationship with
ourselves and others, including God. Hence an addiction is any idol
to which we turn inordinately to escape the pain or perplexity of
life. This is a way of saying that original sin denotes the condition
of alienation in which we all find ourselves, and our lives embody
various futile ways we try to escape that reality. "Consciousness
is a disease," Unamuno says, referring to the divided consciousness
of fallen humanity, and our compulsive rituals are efforts to relieve
its symptoms.
9
When we have exhausted
ourselves emotionally and spiritually, and we see how we have made
our lives unworkable, we become more willing to surrender our self-defeating
behaviors and turn to God -- however we understand God. The Twelve
Steps are a translation into the vernacular of what it looks like
to "turn to God." Practicing the principles embodied in the steps
raises the spiritually dead self to new life.
Our private rituals
are often amusing to others because so much meaning and power has
been projected onto such obviously impotent gods. We turn again
and again to alcohol or bigger cars, drugs or gambling, prostitutes
or excessive work, doughnuts or "intimate" relationships. Anything
in creation can become an idol or fetish if given a priority in
our lives out of proportion to its true value. Because we return
in vain to the same ritualized behaviors, our sinfulness is recursive.
Recursion is a mathematical
term referring to a cyclical or repetitive process generated by
a set of rules which repeats itself indefinitely until a specified
condition is met. Recursion differs from iteration or simple repitition,
however, in that earlier rules are called or invoked by subsequent
rules as part of the process. A rule, in effect, invokes itself.
Iteration resembles a circle, recursion a spiral.
"Use scotch
to feel better" might be the only rule in an alcoholic's program.
(IF [uneasy] [anxious] [frightened] [angry] [etc.]: THEN use scotch.)
When you are content, the "stop rule" might read, put down the bottle.
(IF [peace] [well-being] [confidence] [etc.]: THEN stop.) Because
peace is achieved only intermittently if at all, the rule will repeat:
use scotch. Even while one is drinking scotch, the rule [use scotch]
can be invoked. The rule becomes internalized to such a degree that
over time it alters the program: (IF [anything] THEN [use scotch]).
10
The alcoholic
can not stop. The power to choose has been lost.
Spirituality is also
recursive, however. So are computer languages and computer programs.
So are the Twelve Steps.
The Twelve Steps are
recursive because as we progress up the spiral of spiritual growth,
prior steps are often called or invoked. The first step, for example,
may be invoked as part of the ongoing process at any level. We are
always in a process of recovery -- we are never recovered -- so
there is always farther to go. Long after the primary behavior has
ceased, the flaws from which it issued -- anger, resentment, or
pride, for example -- continue to generate behavior over which we
are powerless and to which we must in turn apply the twelve steps,
if we are not to regress. We are always powerless over our flawed
selves, so we will continue to experience the consequences of self-defeating
behaviors. We are not Sisyphus, however, pushing the rock of our
lives up the same hill again and again, because we are growing spiritually,
and we know from our own experience that our movement resembles
a rising spiral more than an eternally recurring circle. We do make
progress; we arrive at the same choices again and again, but at
a progressively more profound level of awareness and spiritual depth.
We do experience greater freedom, peace, and wholeness. The specific
practices of surrender, self-examination and confession, and repentance,
and sustaining this process through daily surrender, daily self-examination
and confession, and daily repentance, become a lifelong discipline,
a new recursive structure within ourselves which we use in order
to respond to life. Now the program reads: IF [uneasy] [anxious]
[etc.] THEN [use scotch] OR [call someone] OR [go to a meeting]
OR [write down your feelings] OR [pray] OR [meditate] OR [etc.]
The power to choose more acceptable alternatives is restored.
Like the double helix
that contains our genetic program, the declining spiral of the practicing
addict -- the unregenerate man -- is mirrored by the ascending spiral
of the recovering addict. The person in recovery is no longer conformed
to the fallen self, but is in a process of being transformed by
the renewal of the self. The power of recursion enables this to
take place through the practice of a very few rules. Those rules,
applied recursively to all of the circumstances of our lives, result
in an infinite variety of spiritual pathways, all manifestations
of a single paradigm.
In The Recursive
Universe, William Poundstone analyzes a computer program, "Life,"
to show that a universe of replicating dots, manifesting extraordinary
variety and complexity, can be generated by a few very simple rules
applied recursively. He suggests that recursion is the means by
which everything -- from the evolution of galaxies to the forms
of life on our planet -- have been generated. Recursion allows a
great deal to be done with very few rules.
11
The Twelve Steps are
a paradigm of paradigms which are encoded in the narratives and
rituals constitutive of the major religions of the western world.
The sequence of events in the story of Moses and the Exodus, for
example, or the Christ-event of the New Testament, manifest this
process. The six seasons of the church year, the movement of the
Eucharistic liturgy, the Passover Seder, all recapitulate the same
spiritual journey. The Exodus-event or the Christ-event are forms
or patterns for our lives.
Knowing this is not
enough, however; the steps must be applied in order to work. The
twelve steps engender an attitude of openness, willingness, and
humility. Participation in a ritualized re-enactment of the twelve-steps
-- the Eucharist, for example--may alleviate anxiety for a moment,
but in the long run will only deepen the isolation of the individual
by reinforcing pride and self-righteousness, unless the transformative
power of the ritual is internalized and acted upon. In the same
way, studying and understanding the Biblical narratives, without
allowing them to transform one's life, will only sustain one in
the illusion that one knows what is needed for salvation and is
saved by that knowledge. That belief, which inflates the ego, is
at the heart of all Gnostic heresies in their many historical manifestations.
Practicing the steps deflates the ego and returns us to our proper
place in the scheme of things. That practice must take place in
community because disclosing ourselves to others results in a face-to-face
encounter with ourselves and with God: to practice the steps in
isolation reinforces the self-deception which isolated us in the
first place.
Computers are well adapted
to support twelve-step spirituality through interactive programs.
The capacity to backtrack recursively through rules and to branch
and loop generates pathways almost as numerous and complex as our
own journeys. A computer program to facilitate the reality of surrender,
self-examination and confession, repentance, and the sustaining
practices of prayer and meditation might move through each step
in detail, returning the user to prior steps as new insights into
one's life evolve. In comparison with the flexibility and exploratory
power of such a program, a book is fixed and rigid, as limited as
a typewriter in comparison with a word processor.
Spiritual Companion
might begin by exploring the meaning of "surrender" with a multiplicity
of resources -- readings, meditations, testimonies -- as well as
an ELIZA-like reflexive examination of the areas in which one needs
to surrender. Self examination could be coached with examples and
suggestions based on likely scenarios from others with the same
presenting problems. The ten commandments, the seven deadly sins,
or some other schema are good points of departure for self-analysis,
or the seeker might prefer a biographical approach: the program
could prompt for memories on the basis of relationships or phases
of one's life. Self-examination would generate data from which one's
flaws could be identified as well as the pattern of behavior which
has been self-defeating. When the time comes to identify those one
has hurt in order to make amends, the database will have material
ready at hand to facilitate that process.
A personality inventory
like the Myers-Briggs might assist seekers in understanding how
they perceive the world and suggest styles of prayer and meditation
appropriate to their personalities. The Bible Study could be used
to choose passages that address concerns of the moment, as a Gideon
Bible provides a topical index. Testimonies, affirmations, inspirational
writings, one's own private notes could all be cross-referenced
to Biblical passages.
Inevitably computer
programs and the computer itself will provide metaphors for the
spiritual journey of the self. The vocabulary of the electronic
world is making its way into our everyday life. We forget that phrases
like the "Word made flesh" or "written in the book of life" are
metaphors generated by prior technologies of the word. New metaphors
-- the world as computer program, for example, our destinies latent
in recursive code hardwired into its very molecules -- will evolve
over time.
1993
Continued...
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