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Integral Ecology in an Age of AI

In 1972, the Norwegian philosopher Arne Naess proposed a new paradigm based on the holistic view of interconnected nature. He coined the term “deep ecology” to challenge humanity to ask fundamental questions about our place in nature. Rejecting anthropocentrism (human-centeredness) in favor of ecocentrism, Naess argued that all living beings have inherent value regardless of their utility to humans.

At its philosophical core, deep ecology asserts that boundaries between self and other do not exist; all living things are interrelated parts of a larger whole. This perspective leads to what Naess called “self-realization”—a broader identity that encompasses all of nature. Deep ecology maintains that humans are part of nature rather than superior to or separate from it. Protecting nature becomes equivalent to protecting ourselves.

The concept of integral ecology emerged later with a renewed awakening of our place in the biosphere. Cultural historian Thomas Berry and theologian Leonardo Boff, among others, envisioned an “Ecozoic Era” characterized by a harmonious relationship between humans and Earth. Like deep ecology, integral ecology advocates for a holistic approach to humanity’s place in the biosphere but specifically addresses political, social, economic, and environmental problems facing our world. It connects “the cry of the Earth” with “the cry of the poor,” seeing both as stemming from current capitalist and colonialist world orders. A key principle of integral ecology is that environmental and social crises are not separate issues but rather one complex socio-environmental crisis requiring integrated solutions.

The late Pope Francis introduced the term “integral ecology” in his encyclical Laudato Si’, calling for a new paradigm that recognizes the interconnectedness of environmental, economic, social, cultural, and ethical dimensions of life. Integral ecology supports the fundamental idea that “everything is connected” and that today’s environmental and social problems require “a vision capable of taking into account every aspect of the global crisis.” Pope Francis emphasized that “an integral ecology calls for openness to categories which transcend the language of mathematics and biology and takes us to the heart of what it is to be human.” This approach stresses the interdependence between humans and nature, insisting that, although we are often unaware of it, we depend on larger ecological systems for our very existence. Vital processes such as carbon dioxide regulation, water purification, and waste decomposition facilitate life on Earth but are frequently taken for granted.

Integral ecology means that environmental questions have to incorporate a social perspective which takes into account the fundamental rights of the poor and the underprivileged. This perspective recognizes that environmental problems disproportionately affect vulnerable communities. As Pope Francis wrote, “When our hearts lack tenderness, compassion and concern for our fellow human beings,” it becomes “inconsistent to combat trafficking in endangered species while remaining completely indifferent to human trafficking, unconcerned about the poor, or undertaking to destroy another human being deemed unwanted.”

The ideals of deep ecology and integral ecology deserve our attention. They challenge us to move beyond the unhealthy anthropocentrism that defines our age and invite us to embed ourselves within the relationships of nature and culture. However, ecological sustainability faces significant challenges from the dominance of computer technology, artificial intelligence, and particularly social media. Numerous studies show that excessive computer use can lead to attention loss, diminished critical thinking, dopamine addiction, impatience, forgetfulness, and narcissism. In her book, Alone Together: Why We Expect More from Our Technologies and Less from One Another, psychologist Sherry Turkle observed, “We respond to machines not as tools to use but as role models to emulate. As people act upon this proclivity, the isolation and loneliness of modern life is being increased.”

The Vatican recently issued a document on AI, indicating that the concerns surrounding artificial intelligence are complex (Antiqua et Nova 2025). The Catholic Church’s position on AI is cautious and ethically driven, encouraging AI development for human betterment, while stressing careful consideration of potential risks. The Vatican acknowledges that AI has the potential to be a powerful tool for good, citing its ability to improve various aspects of life, including healthcare, education, and environmental sustainability. They view scientific and technological advancements, including AI, as gifts from God, capable of remedying many of the evils that afflict humanity. According to the Vatican, the development and deployment of AI must be guided by ethical principles that prioritize human dignity and the common good.

While I appreciate the Vatican’s ethical and moral concerns, I think stating that AI is simply a tool for human use, or that AI systems should be designed solely to serve human needs, severely undermines technology’s role in human evolution. What I find missing from the Vatican’s views on technology and ecology is the essential role of evolution. The Church speaks as if the human person is uniquely created when, in fact, the human person is the most current species in evolution.  Without accepting evolution as the starting point for assessing what we are in relation to non-human nature and technology, the ideals of the common good and integral ecology remain abstract.   

Teilhard de Chardin was a Catholic priest who realized that evolution is not background to our story, it is our story. “Nothing holds together,” he wrote, “except the whole, and the whole is in evolution.” Without understanding the dynamics of evolution which include complexity, novelty, self-organization, and creativity, integral ecology and technology appear conceptual rather than emergent properties of complexified life in evolution. 

The issue is not ecology versus technology, nor is it about preserving the human person as if we are to be eternally preserved as homo sapiens (how unnatural!). Rather, it concerns nature itself—its energetic essence, intrinsic connectivity, and the way static energy is taken up and reused on new organizational levels. Without incorporating modern scientific insights, philosophy and theology remain self-preserving disciplines incapable of effecting the changes they envision. In his 1967 article on “The Historical Roots of our Ecologic Crisis,” historian Lynn White issued a sharp critique of Christianity by saying: “We shall continue to have a worsening ecologic crisis until we reject the Christian axiom that nature has no reason for existence except to serve us.” He added: “Since the roots of our problems are religious, the remedy must be religious as well.”

This is where Teilhard de Chardin’s vision is vital to today’s world. Teilhard saw evolution as a dynamic unfolding of mind and matter, both open to greater complexity and consciousness. He spoke of “bifacial” matter, possessing both withinness and withoutness, consciousness and attraction, transcendence and unity. He identified love as the core energy of the universe because love simultaneously attracts and transcends. Love functions as a unitive energy, “the building power that works against entropy,” through which elements search their way toward union.

Teilhard believed that biological and cosmic life possess an unyielding openness not adequately explained by materiality alone; rather, matter has an innate propensity toward spirit. He viewed this energy as the overflow of matter—as evolution’s religious dimension. He wrote: “There is only one real evolution, the evolution of convergence, because it alone is positive and creative.” Nature possesses an intrinsic wholeness, a horizon of complexifying wholeness oriented toward ultimate unity. For this reason, he argued that religion and evolution belong together: “Religion and evolution should neither be confused nor divorced,” Teilhard wrote, “they are destined to form one single continuous organism, in which their respective lives prolong, are dependent on, and complete one another.”

Teilhard lived at the dawn of the computer age and was fascinated by computers as a new level of interconnecting minds. This new level, he said, represents a new stage of evolutionary convergence—the formation of what he called “the noosphere,” a new plane of co-reflective thought and action. Just as Earth once covered itself with a film of interdependent living organisms which we call the biosphere, humankind’s achievements are forming a global network of collective mind. The noosphere is a psycho-social process, a planetary neo-envelope essentially linked with the biosphere in which it has its roots yet is distinguished from it.

Teilhard saw evolution proceeding toward greater unification of the whole in and through the human person, whom he viewed as the growing tip of the evolutionary process. In his introduction to Teilhard’s Human Phenomenon, Julian Huxley wrote, “we should consider inter-thinking humanity as a new type of organism whose destiny it is to realize new possibilities for evolving life on this planet.” Both Huxley and Teilhard envisioned this new type of person, a hyperpersonalizing being on a new level of “cooperative interthinking.” Just as human persons developed a complex brain, the earth is now developing a “planetary brain” made possible by computer-mediated interconnected minds. Teilhard posited a new type of person to embody this planetary brain, an “ultra” human whereby thought is no longer limited to the individual but operates on the level of the convergent and collective. This new type of person is emerging in younger generations today.

Teilhard recognized that science alone is insufficient to effect the transition to superconsciousness and collective unity: “It is not tête-à-tête or a corps-à-corps we need; it is a heart to heart.” Technology, therefore, must serve love as the universe’s deepest energy. Only when the noosphere aligns with cosmic life can it facilitate the deeply personal through convergence and creativity. Teilhard wrote: “The future universal cannot be anything else but the hyperpersonal.” In his view, the hyperpersonal represents an evolutionary step toward a new world Soul, a unifying spiritual thread of interconnecting minds. The further evolution of humanity toward greater unity, he wrote, “will never materialize unless we fully develop within ourselves the exceptionally strong unifying powers exerted by inter-human sympathy and religious forces.” Thus, he advocated that mysticism plays an essential role in evolution. 

Teilhard’s vision is empowered by divine love, cosmically convergent and energetically driven toward maximum wholeness, symbolized by Omega. To return to the whole is to relocate ourselves as an intrinsic part of nature; to advance the whole is to consciously reflect on what we desire; to act toward the whole is to realize that God depends on us for the completion of cosmic love. Computer technology and AI can facilitate this vision if we develop AI with a cosmogenic purpose. Teilhard wrote: “Not all directions are good for our advance: one alone leads upward, that which through increasing organization leads to greater synthesis and unity… Life moves toward unification. Our hope can only be realized if it finds its expression in greater cohesion and greater human solidarity.”

Technology is neither a problem nor a solution; it is intrinsic to biological evolution and functions to optimize life in evolution. The problem of technology lies in the conflicted human person who is fearful and constrained by ancient philosophies and religious ideas. It also resides in the self-preserving person of inordinate wealth, fearful of death and nothingness. There is no inherent problem between technology and integral ecology. There is, however, a profound problem of human personhood—what we are, what we desire, and what we live for. Since religion is the divine pole of human evolution, the problem of the human person is fundamentally a religious one. If we can put to rest our Platonic ideals and consciously participate in the dynamic real, evolution may proceed toward greater unity and justice, enkindled by AI development and the emergence of planetary community—a world of deep interconnectivity with a living Soul.

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21 Comments

  1. Andy Clifford on May 25, 2025 at 3:47 am

    Humans are not superior or separate from nature but as the most advanced in evolutionary terms than anything else they have a responsibility to nuture nature, as intrinsically integrated within all.
    AI is just a tool to help this, it cannot be allowed to have any control. In particular it must not be allowed to diminish humanity’s physical or mental abilities; driving, surgery, athletics etc, or critical decision making.
    I think TdC was talking about technology improving communication and human interconnectedness not replacing aspects of human life.

  2. Grant Castillou on May 25, 2025 at 12:30 am

    It’s becoming clear that with all the brain and consciousness theories out there, the proof will be in the pudding. By this I mean, can any particular theory be used to create a human adult level conscious machine. My bet is on the late Gerald Edelman’s Extended Theory of Neuronal Group Selection. The lead group in robotics based on this theory is the Neurorobotics Lab at UC at Irvine. Dr. Edelman distinguished between primary consciousness, which came first in evolution, and that humans share with other conscious animals, and higher order consciousness, which came to only humans with the acquisition of language. A machine with only primary consciousness will probably have to come first.

    What I find special about the TNGS is the Darwin series of automata created at the Neurosciences Institute by Dr. Edelman and his colleagues in the 1990’s and 2000’s. These machines perform in the real world, not in a restricted simulated world, and display convincing physical behavior indicative of higher psychological functions necessary for consciousness, such as perceptual categorization, memory, and learning. They are based on realistic models of the parts of the biological brain that the theory claims subserve these functions. The extended TNGS allows for the emergence of consciousness based only on further evolutionary development of the brain areas responsible for these functions, in a parsimonious way. No other research I’ve encountered is anywhere near as convincing.

    I post because on almost every video and article about the brain and consciousness that I encounter, the attitude seems to be that we still know next to nothing about how the brain and consciousness work; that there’s lots of data but no unifying theory. I believe the extended TNGS is that theory. My motivation is to keep that theory in front of the public. And obviously, I consider it the route to a truly conscious machine, primary and higher-order.

    My advice to people who want to create a conscious machine is to seriously ground themselves in the extended TNGS and the Darwin automata first, and proceed from there, by applying to Jeff Krichmar’s lab at UC Irvine, possibly. Dr. Edelman’s roadmap to a conscious machine is at https://arxiv.org/abs/2105.10461, and here is a video of Jeff Krichmar talking about some of the Darwin automata, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J7Uh9phc1Ow

  3. Gerard Buzolic on May 24, 2025 at 6:35 pm

    Until we see other people, places and things for what they are, and not just for their effect on us, we will have no defence against virtual reality and A.I., which seem to give us things but really only give us the sensory and mental effects that things and places and people have on us.

  4. MaryBeth Duffy on May 24, 2025 at 4:57 pm

    Thank you Sister Ilia for this hopeful writing!! I truly believe that evolution, fueled by the cosmic energy of Love, will continue to move toward Wholeness in Unity of all… Omega (or what I call God’s Kingdom) Humanity having a key role, as the super consciousness of mysticism is explored as a connecting force to bolster the noosphere. Technology is of this growth, no doubt, I see it as guidance past obstacles seemingly impossible to overcome in the past… We all need to have a faith… that although it may not be a straight line, and it’s time is immeasurable, Reality is invested in Goodness and Love, for all of creation 🙏❤️

  5. Joe Masterleo on May 24, 2025 at 4:49 pm

    One never knows a thing until they know on in it’s first cause, substance, or essence. Unitive consciousness is a byproduct of a spiritual awakening or breakthrough into the liminal space between two worlds, where all things can be seen as they are, one and undivided. Steer people in the direction of attaining same, and they are able to know and experience oneness for themselves for the first time, and see in wholes.

    Then the rest takes care of itself, in terms of what they best do with that ecological vision guided by their new Spirit-led nature.There’s a missing dimension to knowing and knowledge that cannot be taught, only acquired or attained. Until that happens, having an informed conversation about how all things are one, for them is of little effect or consequence if they have no eyes to see it. It’s like turning on a light for a blind person in a totally dark room. They won’t stir or respond because they have no sight. Said Teilhard, spirituality is mostly about seeing. No sight, no light in seeing interconnected wholes, which allows for seeing religion, poetry, prophecy, art, and science as the space-time expression of a unified field, the one generative power in the entire universe in physical, intellectual, and spiritual form st all scales

    With the advent of Christ, religion is no longer about ritual, ceremony and form, it’s about trans-form, identifying the invisible substances of all form, experiencing it in a non-corporeal way, and see the interconnected whole of things through the eyes of this intelligent cosmic energy and information field that religion calls God, and science calls “fundamental forces and elementary particles.” Same energy, different names.

  6. Rollie Smith on May 24, 2025 at 1:06 pm

    This is a great piece by a writer I truly respect in fact two of them Ilia and Teilhard. Thanks much.

  7. George Marsh on May 24, 2025 at 9:53 am

    In theory, so far so good. I agree that religion is the core value, the ultimate mystery in relation to the human and non-human environment. In old terms, the divine with and for all beings. Scientists are probing the interconnections and interdependence of creatures with the sources of life. Good, and religious thinkers are advising humans to cooperate with nature for the wholistic good. I hope the study of inter-human relationships may be respected as a legitimate branch of science. What some call ethics or morality as well as sociology can be studied with or without studying what religiously affiliated scholars consider the religious contributions to the study of humankind and its evolution from lower to higher degrees of harmony, peace and spiritual fulfillment.
    For one example, not the highest perhaps, consider the housing crisis in some nations. If shelter is necessary to life, humans have a problem when significant proportions of a population are unhoused. Details about the kind and qualities of shelters need discussion that take in considerations of what is necessary and desirable and what is superfluous, what construction materials are available and how the material environment can provide for the current and future generations. Where religious traditions and new thinking with a religious consciousness can aid such practical deliberations will be wholesome.

  8. William E. Lowry on May 24, 2025 at 9:21 am

    This was a comment I sent to a gentleman associated with communication for MSNBC news. “The present move on the part of the President to return to a nationalistic economy, manufacturing capability and even agriculture is absolutely impossible in a world that is and has evolved as a world. How is this not obvious???” Not nearly as inclusive as your wonderful and thought provoking essay, by a long shot! I’m a personal friend of Lou Savary who, like you, has done a great deal to bring Teilhard’s thoughts to contemporary society. I hope and pray that your essay can be shared with our new Pope. I pray your work might finally be world conscious raising.

  9. Pat Kane on May 24, 2025 at 8:56 am

    It’s so reassuring to read blogs like this. I’m a very senior citizen who has had to unlearn so much of my pre-Vatican 2 Catholic education. I’ve travelled through doubt, fear, anger, rage and finally forgiveness. They taught only what they knew. I hear a different drummer and the beat resonates. I’m so grateful when I hear voices like this assuring me I’m not mislead or crazy.

  10. bob kambic on May 24, 2025 at 7:58 am

    I am not satisfied that this world view is “new”. It is rather a return to the understanding that human ancestors had who were hunters and gatherers, and even early agricultural communities. The advent of larger communities and urbanization world wide with attendant organizational hierarchy, “judges”, “priests”, “kings”, “rulers” took the mantle of awe from our world, our garden of eden, unto themselves and “lesser” humans humbly accepted the imposed reality. Most certainly there always have been those who see through the imposed “reality” and the rulers find it easy to kill them off. But they/we return and here we are now proclaiming that we do see.

    • Kay Jackson on June 1, 2025 at 7:28 am

      Bob,
      I share your view. Our early pre-axial ancestors instinctively knew the sacredness of all life. Instinctively knew what we have yet to relearn millennia later.
      We are all part of an interconnected Sacred web-like circle called Nature.

      Life was a constant struggle and required the bounty of nature to fulfill their basic survival needs of water, shelter and food. Their lifestyle allowed for little else. Their life was very much in-synch with God’s. Drought, cold, storms, herd diseases, all directly impacted the clan’s survival and every family directly experienced the consequences and losses.

      Long before Galileo and Copernicus caused the science -religion split, the church was already “getting too big for its britches” . Exclusion was its modus operandi and it did that very well. So when it was time to separate the human from nature, and the entire chain of life, the separation occurred silently and Christians went armed knowing they were “right”.

      The Hunter-Gathers weren’t Christian. Their faith was often to a Creator Spirit who quite possibly was female as female is associated with fertility.
      This is where I begin to have very strong feelings about the direction of the Church.

      I am all for a ” Planet of the world” but it does not need to be Christian or Catholic. In fact, in many ways it would do better without all the “requirements” ang exclusions. What it does need is EcoCentric, Loving, Merciful, Forgiving, Compassionate, educated, mindful and willing people to remain inclusive to life.

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