Don't Believe Everything You See: Why Buddhist Skepticism Is Vital in the Age of Generative AI
The Guardian
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Details
- Date Published
- 2 Nov 2025
- Priority Score
- 2
- Australian
- No
- Created
- 2 Nov 2025, 04:26 pm
Description
Because our senses are so limited and the nature of all things so transient, what we know to be objective reality is a momentary snapshot of the whole picture
Summary
The article explores the intersection of Buddhist philosophy and the implications of generative AI technologies, highlighting the concept of skepticism towards reality as a tool to understand how perception shapes our interaction with AI-generated content. It emphasizes the transient nature of reality as understood in Buddhist teachings, which can be applied to critically evaluate the perceived objectivity of AI outputs in increasingly polarized and mediated digital environments. By focusing on how generative AI like OpenAI's video generator, Sora 2, impacts our understanding of reality, the piece contributes to discourse on the potential societal shifts and hazards AI may pose by distorting objective truths. While the philosophical framework does not directly delve into existential AI risks, it presents a unique perspective on the implications of emerging technologies for global policy and governance regarding AI-inflicted realities.
Body
‘Artificial intelligence spells troubling times for objective reality … Only by understanding the lived experiences of many do we have any chance of seeing the full picture.’Composite: Nenov/Getty ImagesView image in fullscreen‘Artificial intelligence spells troubling times for objective reality … Only by understanding the lived experiences of many do we have any chance of seeing the full picture.’Composite: Nenov/Getty ImagesDon’t believe everything you see: why Buddhist scepticism is vital in the age of generative AIBertin HuynhBecause our senses are so limited and the nature of all things so transient, what we know to be objective reality is a momentary snapshot of the whole pictureMaking sense of itis a column about spirituality and how it can be used to navigate everyday lifeThe latest iteration ofOpenAI’s video generator, Sora 2, spells troubling times for objective reality. Even before the introduction of generative AI, an increasingly polarised political atmosphere meant we could barely agree on the same set of facts.But for Buddhists, reality has always been something to be sceptical about.Take the heart sutra, a key passage of Buddhist teachings:Avalokiteśvara Bodhisattva,while contemplating profoundly the Prajna Paramita,Realised that the Five Skandhas are empty,and thus he was able to overcome all suffering.The thesis is that one of the Buddha’s disciples, Avalokiteśvara, realises that to overcome suffering he must recognise that the fiveskandhas– things that make up the human experience – are empty. Theskandhasare:Form, all the things our sensory organs can smell, taste, see, feel and hear.Feelingsthat arise when we perceive things.Perceptionis the lens through which we label things and assign value or worth like bananas are delicious or this article is boring.Mental forces, or volition, are the actions and reactions to things and the feelings and perceptions that come from them.Consciousnessis the last because it its the aggregate or heap of the rest together. It is our memories and the human hard drive from which we draw from to inform how we will respond to new forms, feelings and sensations.Buddhists believe that human experience is a culmination of these things, and outside your own cognition there’s no certainty anything exists.One of myBuddhismteachers, the Venerable Miao Guang from the Fo Guang Shan monastery in Taiwan, often used this image as an example:View image in fullscreenIt’s off-white, ‘scoopy’, round …Photograph: camberson/AlamyShe would ask us to describe it, what it should taste like and how we would feel about it. After saying how much we would love a scoop of ice-cream, she would then reveal to us that the photo was, in fact, butter. In a very simple way, she was showing us how our senses trick us. That what we think is objective reality is often clouded by the prejudices and memories that help us make sense of the world around us.When I taught Buddhist scripture to teenagers and we got to this point in the teachings, the response I would often get was, “OK, so nothing is real and nothing matters”. After which I would begin to throw tennis balls at them asking, “So how real is this?”Instead of encouraging nihilism, Buddhism invites us to see that the framework from which our reality comes from is empty. The point of this is to realise that nothing has an “inherent” or “eternal” nature, and believing so is to inviteduhkha– suffering and dissatisfaction. Because our senses are so limited and the nature of all things so transient, what we know to be objective reality is a momentary snapshot of the whole picture. To realise the fiveskandhasare empty is to give yourself a chance to see reality as it is, rather than reality as we think it should be.skip past newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotionSpirituality isn’t rigid dogma. It’s a living, breathing practice that helps make sense of an incomprehensible world | Shadi Khan SaifRead moreGenerative AI throws a whole new spanner in that five-step process of constructing reality. Being sceptical of reality can only take you so far, just as the Buddha walked the middle path between luxury and poverty to realise his enlightenment, we can’t cling to this pessimistic point of view or we might get hit by a tennis ball.Only by understanding the lived experiences of many do we even have any chance of seeing the full picture.The heart sutra goes on to say:No ignorance, nor its extinction;No ageing and no death, nor their cessation.No suffering, causes, cessation, nor the path.No wisdom nor attainment.As there is nothing to attainWhat does this mean in a practical sense? It means don’t believe everything you see – especially on social media.Explore more on these topicsReligionMaking sense of itBuddhismMindfulnessPhilosophycommentShareReuse this content