Lincoln Cannon argues theosis in Mormon Transhumanism is communal, not individual—making superintelligent communion an existential imperative, not a nicety.
Lincoln Cannon speculates on what it would mean for a superintelligence to encounter God—exploring theophanies at the intersection of theology and advanced AI.
Carl Youngblood at the 2025 Organized Intelligence Conference—exploring what intelligence is and what it means for humanity's technological and spiritual path
Lincoln Cannon reflects on Elder Gerrit W. Gong's landmark LDS speech on AI, calling it the most significant address from a Church leader on the topic.
Lincoln Cannon's prayer-form address at the 2025 MTA Conference reflects on how humans and AI might together participate in divine creation.
Lincoln Cannon argues Vazza overstates computational constraints on the Simulation Hypothesis—defending its plausibility against dismissive critiques.
Lincoln Cannon argues that technological uniformity resolves Bostrom's Simulation Argument — advanced civilizations converge on creating ancestor simulations.
Lincoln Cannon argues that staying atheist while coherently aspiring to humanity's flourishing grows harder as AI creation raises profound questions about God.
Lincoln Cannon argues blockchain technology offers critical defenses against singletons—centralized powers like rogue AI that could dominate humanity.
Lincoln Cannon introduces LincGPT—an OpenAI-based AI trained on his writings about Mormon transhumanism, technology, and postsecular religion.