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AI lets you ‘talk’ to dead relatives now. So why won’t we talk about the afterlife?

Michael Zigarelli· ·3 min read · 0 reactions · 0 comments · 69 views
#ai#ethics#afterlife#grief#technology#Michael Zigarelli#Messiah University#Associated Press#South Korea#Baker Books
AI lets you ‘talk’ to dead relatives now. So why won’t we talk about the afterlife?
TL;DR · WeSearch summary

AI technology is being used to create chatbots and avatars that mimic deceased relatives, as seen in South Korea where families use AI‑generated videos to hear messages from the dead. The article discusses ethical concerns such as potential exploitation of grieving individuals and the lack of consent from the deceased, while also referencing research on near‑death experiences that challenges materialist explanations of consciousness after death. It concludes by urging deeper inquiry into the possibility of real reunion beyond simulated interactions.

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Original article
Washington Examiner · Michael Zigarelli
Read full at Washington Examiner →
Opening excerpt (first ~120 words) tap to expand

The newest answer to death does not come from a church, synagogue, or mosque, but from software — and soon, perhaps, a subscription plan.Earlier this month, the Associated Press reported on grieving families in South Korea using AI-generated videos to hear messages from deceased relatives. The technology is not yet a sustained conversation, though the direction is clear. Feed a system enough voice recordings, text messages, videos, and social media posts, and it will generate a chatbot or avatar that looks and sounds like someone you lost. Recommended Stories AI lets you ‘talk’ to dead relatives now.

Excerpt limited to ~120 words for fair-use compliance. The full article is at Washington Examiner.

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