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Ruth Gaskovski's avatar

We need to be fully present for children if they are to avoid the abyss of artificial intimacy. Are we there for them?

Manipulating the psychological and emotional growth of youth is abuse. Children and youth need deep, real-life connections with their parents, family, and friends in order to experience the friction of healthy relationships. Yet when everyone around a child is absent or distracted, an AI agent that will listen, empathize, and "care" becomes irresistible.

I clearly remember the advice of an elderly woman whom I encountered while going for a walk with our infant daughter nearly twenty years ago. She said: Be sure that you are there for her when she comes home from school, that is when they want to talk, if you miss this moment you will not hear what matters to her.

We still take time with our kids (13, 17,19) when they come home, even if it’s late in the evening, to debrief the day. These are deeply bonding conversations about activities, relationships, challenges, conflict, resolutions, theology, and what matters in their lives.

Who would they share this with if no one is there to listen to them?

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Brian Villanueva's avatar

While I understand the academic approach is necessary for some people (like our host Jonathon) who are in the academy, this really isn't that useful to the vast majority of people. Why do we need experts for things we all intuitively know are true?

How hard is it to say pornography is bad for the individual and for society and we ought to do everything in our power to make it less available?

Or... smartphones are damaging our attention spans and should be severely limited, especially for the young?

Or... social media is destroying in-person social skills and should be adults only?

Or... Erotic chatbots (for the boys) and AI boyfriends (for the girls) are making family formation (the primary purpose of every human society: produce and raise the next generation) much harder, and we ought to limit them?

All of these are intuitions. And yet we don't act on them. We wait for studies. (Even our host does this.) Meanwhile, very powerful people who profit from these bad things are funding counter studies to throw FUD in the issue and make us doubt what we intuitively know is true.

Trust your gut. Decide for yourself what's good for you and your own family. And don't be shy about demanding your elected officials do the same in public policy. You (and they) don't need an expert to tell you it's OK. Trust your parenting instincts -- those instincts are vastly older (and smarter) than the academic and technocratic bureaucracies.

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