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Read the New Short Story "A Priest, a Rabbi, and a Robot Walk Into a Bar"

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Each month, Future Tense Fiction--a series of short stories from Future Tense and ASU's Center for Science and the Imagination about how technology and science will change our lives--publishes a story on a theme. Stop me if you've heard this one before." David had heard this one before, but he needed a job. He folded his hands in his lap and summoned the patience he'd learned sitting through Talmudic debates. He waved for Aiden Shure, Town of Our Own's CEO, to continue. "It's a dive bar, lots of rough language from the other patrons, but the bartender says, 'Father, what can I get you?' The priest says: 'Well, I have to lead Mass in the morning, but a wee nip can't hurt. Gimme three fingers of Irish whiskey and cut it with holy water.' So the bartender runs over to the church next door, borrows a bit of holy water, and makes the drink. The priest is satisfied, so the bartender moves on: 'Rabbi, what can I get you?' The rabbi says, 'Well it is the Sabbath day, but if it's not too much work I wouldn't say no to a glass of kosher wine from the vineyards of the Holy Land.' So the bartender finds a bottle of sweet Israeli red, and the rabbi thanks him." Aiden told the joke like he'd practiced it a lot while stuck in traffic. David braced for the punchline he knew was coming. "So the bartender turns to the robot, which has been quietly listening to the other patrons.


A.I. Could Bring a Sea Change in How People Experience Religious Faith

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A Slate staff writer who regularly reports on Christianity responds to Andrew D. Hudson's "A Priest, a Rabbi, and a Robot Walk Into a Bar." The Michigan-based company Covenant Eyes markets itself to Christians who want to stop viewing pornography. Its software takes screenshots of a user's screen activity, uses A.I. to scan it for pornographic imagery, and then sends regular reports to the user and a designated "ally" who has agreed to hold him accountable. The company's name comes from a Bible verse that reads, "I made a covenant with my eyes not to look lustfully at a young woman." Everyone wants technology to reflect their own worldview, and religious conservatives are no exception.