Will Power Return to the Clouds? From Divine Authority to GenAI Authority
Mohammad Saleh Torkestani, Taha Mansouri

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the parallels between historical authority control and contemporary AI content moderation, proposing governance measures to address ethical challenges and rebuild public trust in generative AI systems.
Contribution
It offers a comparative-historical analysis of AI authority using Foucault, Weber, and Floridi, and proposes a comprehensive governance blueprint for AI regulation.
Findings
Centralized gatekeeping and legitimacy claims mirror historical authority structures
Ethical issues include opacity, bias, and misinformation in AI systems
Proposed governance includes international registries, representation, literacy, and data trusts
Abstract
Generative AI systems now mediate newsfeeds, search rankings, and creative content for hundreds of millions of users, positioning a handful of private firms as de-facto arbiters of truth. Drawing on a comparative-historical lens, this article juxtaposes the Galileo Affair, a touchstone of clerical knowledge control, with contemporary Big-Tech content moderation. We integrate Foucault's power/knowledge thesis, Weber's authority types (extended to a rational-technical and emerging agentic-technical modality), and Floridi's Dataism to analyze five recurrent dimensions: disciplinary power, authority modality, data pluralism, trust versus reliance, and resistance pathways. Primary sources (Inquisition records; platform transparency reports) and recent empirical studies on AI trust provide the evidentiary base. Findings show strong structural convergences: highly centralized gatekeeping,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEthics and Social Impacts of AI · Misinformation and Its Impacts · Social Media and Politics
