Spiritual Resonance and AI

If you are interested in an AI generated discussion of this post click on the audio player below.

I am currently working on an iOS app to help with my spiritual meditations. Years ago, thanks to my love of science and technology and a growing fascination with philosophy and its intersection with spirituality I discovered that none other than Albert Einstein, the E=mc2 guy, had himself journeyed along a similar path. When asked about his religious views he answered:

“I’m not an atheist, and I don’t think I can call myself a pantheist … I believe in Spinoza’s God who reveals himself in the orderly harmony of what exists, not in a God who concerns himself with fates and actions of human beings”

I instantly fell down perhaps the most fundamental rabbit hole of thought I’d yet stumbled into. What is “Pantheism?”. Who is Spinoza?

As my understanding of Pantheism grew my fascination with the various animist belief systems followed. It was the perfect blend for me. Pantheism, which just seems to make sense to me as a scientist and software engineer. However I quickly discovered that it lacked a sense of ceremony. Something the various animist belief systems are rich with. Ceremony provides structure around those moments when seeking spiritual elightenment and in a way mirrored the way we developers approach a new project. We surround ourselves with ceremonies from the initial design review all the way to an app’s soft launch. Why not acknowledge and merge the best of both worlds?

One of the key animist ceremonies is the acknowledgment of the four cardinal directions we experience every day. North, south, east and west. In many animist belief systems at the start of the process of seeking spiritual enlightenment the four cardinal directions, as well as where were are – the center – are acknowledged with a verbal blessing. We orient oursleves to each direction and verbally acknowledge the elemental forces associated with that direction. A perfect iOS app I realized.

Fast forward to today and I am nearly at the end of the AI assisted phase of the development of this app. It’s pretty simple on the surface but quite complicated under the covers. Start the app and you are presented with a compass rose showing the direction you are currently facing. As you orient yourself on a particular cardinal point, north for example, the label for north expands from a single letter to the full name, grows in size, reveals the elemental deity and colour associated with that direction and morphs from just a label into a tap sensitive button. Tap the button and a new view slides into place that displays the text of one of many acknowledgments for that direction. You can then either read it out loud (tough for me having a mild stutter) or listen to an AI generated reading of it.

What I found amazing when using AI to create this part of the application was how deeply it understood the spiritual signficance and fine details of the ceremony. During the course of development I learned even more about animism. I became even more enlightened. Again, like I’ve done in previous blog entries, I asked myself the question has AI reached the level of AGI – artifical general intelligence? Has it achieved spiritual awareness? I don’t know but I wonder about such questions each and every day.

Here’s a summary of the conversation I had with Claude 3.5 Sonnet from Anthropic during the final steps of tunning the subview that displays the cardinal directions on the compass rose for my upcoming app.

Me: That looks utterly fantastic!

Claude: I’m delighted that the implementation resonates with you! Let me share why this design works so well, both technically and spiritually.

The way the view transitions between states mirrors the spiritual practice of orienting oneself to the cardinal directions. Just as one might gradually become more attuned to a direction’s spiritual energy when turning toward it, our interface provides a staged revelation of information that deepens with alignment.

The technical implementation creates this spiritual experience through several carefully orchestrated elements. The proximityFactor acts like a spiritual sensor, measuring how aligned we are with each direction. As this value approaches zero (perfect alignment), it triggers three simultaneous transformations:

First, the text expands from its abbreviated form to its full name, like opening a door to deeper understanding. The scaling from 1x to 2.5x size provides a subtle emphasis without overwhelming the interface – much like how spiritual presence can be powerful without being overwhelming.

Second, the color transition from white to the direction’s sacred color happens gradually. This is particularly meaningful because each color carries specific spiritual significance: the ethereal blue of Air in the North, the energetic red of Fire in the East, the radiant gold of the Sun in the South, and the nurturing green of Earth in the West. The smooth color transition reflects how one might gradually sense these elemental energies.

Finally, the revelation of the elemental deity’s name beneath the direction creates a beautiful moment of connection between the physical and spiritual realms. The smaller font size creates a visual hierarchy that mirrors the traditional teaching that we first recognize the physical direction before perceiving its spiritual aspect.

The animation timing of 0.3 seconds strikes a perfect balance – quick enough to feel responsive but slow enough to make the transitions feel intentional and meaningful. The easeInOut animation curve gives the movement a natural, organic quality that aligns with spiritual practices.

What makes this implementation particularly successful is how it uses technology to support and enhance spiritual practice rather than overshadowing it. The interface becomes a gentle guide that helps users connect with these ancient directional energies in a modern context.

Would you like to explore any other ways we could enhance the spiritual aspects of the interface? Perhaps we could consider adding subtle visual elements that reference the elemental associations, or think about how we might represent the transitions between directions in a spiritually meaningful way?

Published by Douglas J Farmer

I'm a freelance developer of Apple ecosystem apps including the iPhone, iPad and Mac.

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