How can rapid advancements in medical technology, questions about the criteria for brain death and the rise of transhumanism be considered within a Catholic framework?
Ethics/Morals
-
-
Catholic moral theologians, ethicists back Anthropic in government AI showdown
by OSV Newsby OSV NewsA group of Catholic moral theologians and ethicists said March 13 that AI giant Anthropic “was acting as a responsible and moral corporate citizen” and “not as a threat to …
-
Much information about AI literacy is out there, but what is the Catholic approach? Here’s a short examen on our AI use.
-
Along with the U.S., Canada and Mexico, Pew included in its survey various European, Asian and South American nations, as well as Australia.
-
A two-day academic conference “Artificial Intelligence: A Tool for Virtue?” was held March 5–6 at the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas in Rome.
-
Natural law “is in principle knowable by anyone, but this knowledge is not always easy to attain; proper education is required.”
-
How do we balance the freedom to innovate and guard against known harms of AI? Catholic social teaching has a human-first answer.
-
Hundreds attend Catholic medical conference exploring human dignity in health care
by Katie Yoderby Katie Yoder“We are all called to remember that health care is not simply a business; it is a vocation, a mission that is grounded in the dignity of every human person.”
-
At the Conference on Corporate Social Responsibility of Big Tech, a keynoter posed the query, “What might we ask of Big Tech, through a Catholic lens?”
-
Pope tells U.S. high school students their voice, ideas, faith matter
by Cindy Woodenby Cindy WoodenWith a livestream connection, Pope Leo spoke for close to an hour with participants at the National Catholic Youth Conference meeting at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis.
>