Christ is Risen! Indeed He is risen!
Now that I'm trying to write again and Holy Week is past, you may be wondering, dear reader, what I'm planning to do here after the 7-year hiatus. Obviously the things I write won't be exactly the same as they were before, since I and the world have changed so much. Most of my more fruitful thinking and reading recently has clustered around three main topics:
First, I hope to explore the relation between (and, ultimately, the complementarity of) faith and science. For the most part, modern Orthodoxy is not so much anti-science as it is not much in conversation with science at all. I'd like to do my small part to change that. In particular, I've done a good deal of thinking about how to bring the theory of evolution into conversation with my faith and worldview since my last post on the subject 11 years ago.
Second, I would be dishonest if I said that watching the Evangelical world I left behind largely rally behind the endless lies and cruelty of a would-be dictator over the past ten years didn't push me to do a lot of thinking about Christianity and the worldly powers, or that this thinking wasn't one of the things that drove me to revive the blog. Neither are Orthodox Christians immune to the temptation to an overly cozy relationship with worldly powers, to seek to build the Kingdom of God through worldly means deemed more "effective"—or else to withdraw from the social implications of the faith and focus on a purely otherworldly salvation. My meditations on this topic will be as much for my own benefit as anyone else's.
Third, I'd like to explore the ramifications of our increasingly rapidly evolving use of technology for our lives, our habits, and our spirituality. Increasingly large swaths of our lives are lived, or at least mediated, through screens, apps, digital technologies; the vast network that Luciano Floridi calls the "infosphere", and subject to the influence and surveillance of the multinational corporations that run them. As we use these devices, how are they 'using' us? What are they doing to us? How are they shaping our understanding of the 'good life', of what it means to be fully human—or whether being 'fully human' is even desirable anymore? In particular, I recently read Are We All Cyborgs Now? by Robin Phillips and Joshua Pauling, which has been very instructive in how to ask and think critically about these questions.
A technological subject that has developed drastically since before my hiatus, and on which I feel somewhat more qualified to speak than the average person, is artificial intelligence, specifically the generative AI that is disrupting industries, loosening peoples' grasp on reality, ostensibly replacing human labor, and insatiably devouring ever-increasing amounts of water, electricity, silicon, and cash as it pulls the whole global economy into its orbit. You can probably guess some of my thoughts on the subject already, but I hope to develop them more in the near future.Related to technology and public life is a book I read last year that made a powerful impression on me and has influenced much of my reading and thinking ever since: Against the Machine by Paul Kingsnorth. It's not an easy book to summarize succinctly, but if I might attempt to do so, it's a manifesto against the dehumanizing global industrial-economic-techno-political anti-culture Kingsnorth and others call "the Machine" that uproots traditional communities and cultures, exploits people, and pollutes the environment, turning them all into fuel for the idol we've made of endless growth and "Progress". The result is alienation, moral confusion, and spiritual blindness as the Machine remakes us in its own image as its willing servants. If any of this sounds familiar to you, you're in luck: I've taken extensive notes and am hoping to blog through the book in detail.