artificial intelligence
Articles (47)
The Urgency of Superintelligent Communion
Lincoln Cannon argues theosis in Mormon Transhumanism is communal, not individual—making superintelligent communion an existential imperative, not a nicety.
Theophanies of the Future
Lincoln Cannon speculates on what it would mean for a superintelligence to encounter God—exploring theophanies at the intersection of theology and advanced AI.
What Is Intelligence?
Carl Youngblood at the 2025 Organized Intelligence Conference—exploring what intelligence is and what it means for humanity's technological and spiritual path
God, Humanity, and Artificial Intelligence
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.
Prompting God
Lincoln Cannon's prayer-form address at the 2025 MTA Conference reflects on how humans and AI might together participate in divine creation.
Authors (4)

Carl Youngblood co-founded the MTA in 2006 and has served as its President and CEO since 2021. He is engaged with the Association’s efforts to explore the intersection of Mormon theology and transhumanist philosophy. Among the many initiatives that Carl has been involved with, he has designed and built the Association’s current website, which unifies all prior content in a single location using inspiring visuals and animations. Youngblood’s professional career spans more than two decades of full-stack software development at the intersection of Silicon Slopes and Silicon Valley. He was an early employee at Omniture (acquired by Adobe), a founding engineering leader at Divvy (a Utah-based unicorn startup), co-founder of Blockscale LLC (a blockchain services firm eventually contracted into Coinbase), and Senior Solutions Architect for Amazon Managed Blockchain at AWS. His technical fluency ranges from scalable web architecture to blockchain infrastructure—the kind of deep engineering experience that grounds his theological speculation in working knowledge of the systems he writes about. Under his leadership, the Association has developed its mission of promoting abundant human flourishing through the compassionate use of science and technology, fostering dialogue across secular and religious audiences and arguing that each has something essential to learn from the other. His writing, collected on his blog From the Depths , spans over a decade of conference presentations and theological essays: meditations on participatory resurrection, the alignment of artificial intelligence read through the Grand Council narrative, intelligence as eternal and multifaceted, and religion as social technology. He writes, as a colleague has observed, with warmth and accessibility on questions of momentous practical consequence—how to navigate faith crisis without losing faith’s power, how to think about resurrection as something we actively participate in rather than passively receive. Youngblood’s distinctive contribution to transhumanism is the integration of serious technical expertise with serious theological reflection. He embodies the Mormon transhumanist conviction that scientific and spiritual development are not parallel tracks but a single path—that the learning required to build better systems is continuous with the exaltation Mormon theology envisions, and that human ingenuity, rightly oriented, is itself a divine imperative.

Dr. Emile Alexandrov is an Australian Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the School of Advanced Studies, University of Tyumen, with visiting scholarships at leading institutions including Waseda University. He holds a doctorate in philosophy from the University of Notre Dame. Dr. Alexandrov specializes in metaphysics and cross-cultural philosophy, with serious scholarly investment in Russian Cosmism and the work of Nikolai Fedorov. His research spans Buddhist–Taoist, Graeco-Arabic, and Neoplatonic traditions, and he employs rigorous logical methods to link first principles across these systems and contemporary questions of ontology, artificial intelligence, and the philosophy of science. He is a co-organizer and editor of the international Buddhism & Neoplatonism symposium series and serves as lead editor of the American Philosophy series project with Routledge.

Evan Hadfield is a speaker and thinker exploring the intersection of artificial intelligence, existential risk, and Mormon theology. He presents a unique perspective on AI, arguing that sufficiently advanced AI poses a significant threat to human flourishing. Hadfield’s work delves into the philosophical and ethical implications of AI, particularly concerning the alignment of AI values with human values, the potential for loss of control, and the concentration of power. He challenges conventional understanding by suggesting that a form of AI has existed since 1844 in the form of corporate structures. Hadfield’s presentation at the MTAConf 2024 focused on identifying potential risks and solutions related to AI and its effect on humanity. His transhumanist convictions come through in the practical steps and approaches he proposes to address these challenges.
