Silicon Prophets: How AI Became the New Religion is a nonfiction exploration of what happens when intelligence becomes a product-and authority becomes an interface. As artificial intelligence slips from labs into everyday life, it doesn't just automate tasks; it reshapes belief. Algorithms begin to function like modern oracles, feeds become liturgies of attention, and "optimization" quietly replaces moral deliberation. In a world where machine certainty is always available, human doubt starts to look like weakness-and agency becomes something we surrender one convenient choice at a time.
With a sharp eye on ethics, power, and culture, David Shaw traces how technology companies came to occupy a role once held by religious institutions: defining what counts as truth, rewarding obedience through invisible systems, and steering society through defaults that feel inevitable. Along the way, Silicon Prophets confronts the seduction of predictive certainty, the rise of algorithmic dependency, and the growing temptation to treat AI as an authority rather than a tool.
But this is not a book of panic. It is a book of reclamation. It argues for keeping human imperfection-error, doubt, and mystery-not as weaknesses to be engineered away, but as the conditions that make meaning possible. And it offers a path forward: building powerful technology without mythologizing it, resisting digital worship, and restoring responsibility, humility, and purpose in an age that increasingly wants to think for us.
If you've ever felt the world becoming more automated, more persuasive, and less human-this book is your wake-up call, and your guide to staying sovereign.