About Robotics and the Creation of Man
| Authors | Rueben, Matthew |
|---|---|
| Date | 2015 |
| Proceedings | Proceedings of the 2015 Christian Engineering Conference |
| Place | Seattle Pacific University, Seattle, WA |
| Vol / Pages | pp. 119u2013127 |
| URL | https://drive.google.com/file/d/11k9zlyvaVh2XJeuoxg-btM7RZlgRQ-PN/view |
Type: Conference Paper
Tags: Christian Engineering
Abstract
This paper examines robotics from a Christian perspective, addressing ethical and theological questions raised by artificial intelligence and autonomous machines. It challenges three common misconceptions—(1) humans as creators of robots, (2) human-like robots sharing the image of God, and (3) humanity as ultimate authority over creation—by drawing principles from the Genesis creation account. The discussion reframes these assumptions into sound conclusions: humans are designers and builders, robots reflect the image of man rather than God, and human authority over technology is delegated and contingent on God’s purposes. The paper explores implications for robot design, emphasizing alignment with divine intent, stewardship, and priestly responsibility over creation. Practical recommendations include rejecting robots that enable harm or undermine community, while encouraging designs that promote safety, care, creativity, and human flourishing. Ultimately, robotics should serve as a means to glorify God and advance His purposes, guided by Scripture, sound engineering practice, and Christian ethics.
