Showing posts with label Modern Times. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Modern Times. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

AI, Astonishment, and the Economy — A Morning Reflection


This morning, an email news circular from Humans at Galaxy.ai carried a striking phrase:

“AI doesn’t print money (yet).”

The sentence made me pause.

In the same breath, the circular mentioned how an advanced AI system had reportedly written a mathematical proof in hours — something human physicists had wrestled with for decades. Whether fully accurate or not, the idea itself was astonishing. Machines attempting what only the sharpest human minds once could — perhaps even approaching problems in ways “no human would have tried.”

We are living in extraordinary times.

The skyline by the river with financial buildings.











Yet alongside this technological excitement came another sobering reality: major technology companies recently lost enormous market value as investors realized that AI, for all its brilliance, does not automatically generate profit. Intelligence does not equal income. Innovation does not guarantee return.

And that is where the deeper reflection begins.

AI is powerful. It can analyze data, accelerate research, assist discovery, and reshape industries. It is already transforming healthcare, finance, education, and creative work. In many ways, it feels like the Industrial Revolution of our generation — a shift redefining how value is created.

But AI does not “print money.” Money rests on systems — trust, governance, regulation, productivity, and human behavior. Technology can amplify efficiency, but it cannot replace the foundations of an economy. It still depends on electricity, infrastructure, policy, and above all, human decision-making.

Some worry that those who control AI infrastructure will control wealth itself. History shows that new technologies often concentrate power at first — factory owners in the industrial age, oil magnates in the energy age, tech giants in the internet age. AI may follow a similar pattern.

Yet history also shows that power diffuses. Markets adjust. Regulations evolve. Innovation spreads.

Perhaps the real question is not whether AI will make money.
The deeper question is: 

What will we do with the power it gives us?

Technology does not create greed or wisdom. It magnifies what is already in the human heart.

“Technology magnifies what is already in the human heart.”

As Scripture reminds us:

“For the love of money 

is a root of all kinds of evil.” (1 Timothy 6:10)

AI may change the speed of our economy.
It may change the nature of work.
It may reshape how knowledge is discovered.

But it does not change the moral condition of humanity.

Reading that morning email, I felt both awe and caution. Astonishment at human ingenuity — and quiet awareness that no machine can replace wisdom, stewardship, and integrity.

But it certainly prints questions.

And perhaps asking the right questions is where true value begins. 

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