What if the most dangerous mistake we make about intelligent systems is not technical but spiritual? This book cuts through hype and fear to ask a sharper question: can a system that predicts and optimises ever truly know, care, or worship—and how would we tell? It offers a clear framework for judging claims about awareness, love, or faith in machines, moving beyond slogans to evidence you can actually test. Written for thoughtful readers at the crossroads of faith and code—engineers, ethicists, pastors, and the simply curious—it lays out a practical assay for the soul in the age of algorithms. You will learn why AI and consciousness are not the same conversation, how moral reasoning in machines differs from responsibility, and where the human AI empathy gap quietly misleads us. Along the way it dismantles techno-superstitions, reframes the ethics of artificial intelligence, and explores religion in the digital age without ceding rigour. - A crisp test for person-like claims that goes beyond chat demos - A humane posture for design, governance, and everyday use - Practices for attention, sabbath, and truthfulness that keep tools in their place If you have ever wondered can machines have a soul, wrestled with the AI free will debate, or sought a serious Turing test for consciousness, this is your field guide. It will not tell you what to believe; it will give you better questions—and the courage to live by them.
The Soul Algorithm
SKU: 9789374124666
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- Hans Keller writes at the seam where code meets conscience. Raised among workshop tools and well-worn theology on a German kitchen table, he learned early that craft and meaning belong together. His work probes how attention, agency, and worship are shaped by the systems we build—drawing threads from Augustine and Aquinas to Turing and today’s alignment labs. Keller’s essays and talks favour clear questions over grand claims, treating metaphysics not as escape but as a discipline for designers and citizens. He has advised product teams, faith communities, and policymakers on dignity-centred technology, and is known for turning abstract debates into human-scale choices. Living between library and laptop, he insists on sabbath as a design principle, truthfulness as interface ethic, and humility as the only rational stance toward power. This book continues his project: resisting idolatry in an age of intelligent tools, and recovering the courage to be human.


















