Pope Leo XIVs first encyclical, Magnifica Humanitas, was published just over a month ago to mixed reactions. Some found the pontiffs views admirably measured and wise, acknowledging the potential good that can come from new technology while issuing salient warnings about the potential for ideolatry and dehumanization. Others were concerned that the encyclical misrepresented the state of the world today, especially in the realm of economics.
Law Liberty offers responses in both veins. Reema Jadeja welcomes the encyclical as a … counterbalance to accelerationists desperate for singularity and technocrats erroneously assuming they alone shall define what is good or even transcendent. Samuel Gregg worries that making contestable assertions about economic equality, or presenting questionable accounts of economic history, downplays the complexity of the problems that Catholic Social Teaching seeks to address.

Jul 13, 2026 Magnificent Humanity, Poor Economics Samuel Gregg Magnifica Humanitas could address contemporary questions more effectively if it had sounder economics.

Jul 13, 2026 Between Babel and Jerusalem Reema Jadeja-Reed The pope issues a warning about the spiritual dangers of AI.