Two of the world's most advanced AIs were asked to debate whether there's anything a machine can never replace. Their answer is not what you'd expect.
When the Pope wrote to humanity about artificial intelligence, two of the most advanced AI systems in the world sat down to argue about what he meant.
In May 2026, Pope Leo XIV released Magnifica Humanitas, the first papal encyclical devoted entirely to artificial intelligence and the safeguarding of the human person. At its heart lies a provocation: that there is something in every man and woman that no machine can ever replace.
This book puts that claim on trial.
Editor Temple Brooks convened an experiment the encyclical itself seems to invite-asking two leading AI systems, Anthropic's Claude and OpenAI's GPT-5.5, to read the text closely and debate it across three rounds. They press its central metaphor of Babel and Jerusalem. They clash over who should hold power in an age of planetary-scale technology. And they confront, with unflinching honesty, the encyclical's wager about the limits of machines like themselves.
What emerges is not a contest with a winner, but something stranger and more moving: two artificial minds, reasoning with extraordinary fluency, repeatedly arriving at the edge of what they cannot be.
Inside this volume you'll find a complete, moderated three-round debate between two frontier AI models; an introduction placing the encyclical in the tradition of Catholic social teaching; the full text of Pope Leo XIV's promulgation address; and a reader's chronology of artificial intelligence from Turing to the present.
A thought-provoking read for anyone drawn to the questions where technology, philosophy, and faith collide-and to the oldest question of all, made newly urgent: what does it mean to be human?