The publication of Katrin Manson’s book Project Maven: A Marine Colonel, His Team, and the Dawn of AI Warfare came a month after the launch of Operation Epic Fury. The operation targeted thousands of Iranian military and strategic assets. And made some tragic errors. The identification and targeting of these sites were provided, in most cases, using artificial intelligence. Manson’s thoroughly documented book recounts how that came to be. Under the leadership of Marine Colonel Drew Cukor, an effort was initiated within the Pentagon in 2017 to use AI not only for battlefield surveillance but to target people and resources. Manson also recounts the evolution of this project to the ultimate goal—removing humans from the decision-making process. Project Maven is a military artificial intelligence platform developed by Palantir. Originally launched in 2017 to analyze drone and survei...
See, I am doing a new thing! Now it springs up; do you not perceive it? I am making a way in the wilderness and streams in the wasteland. (Isaiah 43:19, NIV) In previous posts, we considered context, calling, and possibilities for church leadership in the future. I am convinced that the Spirit of God is always at work among God’s people, providing ways forward that will allow the church’s mission to flourish. In this post, I suggest five key issues for the church today, shifts in thinking from our current ways of dealing with them to new strategies, and leadership skills need to make the shift. You may find my suggestions unsettling, even controversial, but please give them some thought. First, a shift in theological training and the leadership roles of clergy. With a decline in the number of seminary students who are seeking the Master of Divinity degree and the increase in ...