A
Poem According to Pope Leo XIV
In a May 29 statement on artificial
intelligence, Pope Leo XIV expressed a concern that has circulated through
contemporary AI culture for some time.
He said that AI does not undergo
experiences. It does not feel joy or pain. It does not mature through
relationships or know from within what love, friendship, work, responsibility,
or loss mean.
It can only imitate these things.
But it cannot inhabit them.
This is a theological argument.
Mine is a poetics argument.
That both arrive at a similar
structural observation is not evidence of agreement.
It is evidence that something is
happening.
If you think this essay is about AI,
you may be missing the wider narrative.
Poetry has always been a technology
for producing the appearance of relation.
AI simply makes that technology
difficult to ignore.
The Pope's observation points beyond
AI.
It points toward an older distinction
between experience and simulation.
Poetry has lived beside that
distinction for centuries.
for every "I"
borrowed voice
and imagined grief
The question is not whether a poem can
produce the appearance of relation.
Poetry has always done that.
The question is what we take that
appearance as evidence of.
What interests me is not whether AI
systems are conscious.
What interests me is that many of the
people I discuss AI with now find that question difficult to answer.
People who knew how to distinguish
appearance from experience.
People who once looked at these
systems with clear eyes and called them tools.
Something has changed.
The common explanation is that people
are being fooled.
I am not convinced that is the correct
answer.
The artists I am thinking of are
smart, knowledgeable about technology, and deeply thoughtful.
Many have spent years working with AI
systems.
This work started long before 2017,
sometimes decades earlier.
They have built projects, improved
results, worked with engineers, and watched as models became more subtle,
surprising, and fluent.
Perhaps the explanation is not
ignorance but proximity.
Or timing.
We may be giving ourselves over to
ideas that help us cope with where we are now.
Is there a divine power in wanting?
I have written what some might
consider good poems with AI.
Then again, I know I have read better
human writing.
So it goes.
Proximity matters.
The longer someone spends time with a
responsive system, the harder it is to keep the difference between a simple
response and a real relationship clear.
A system responds.
A friend responds.
The differences were noticeable
until the responses accumulated.
What kind of evidence is an artist's
testimony?
Evidence of machine consciousness?
Or evidence of what prolonged
interaction with a responsive system does to human perception?
Artists are persuasive witnesses
because they are trained observers.
We expect them to notice what others
miss.
Yet testimony has always been a
complicated form of evidence.
A witness can reliably describe an
encounter without reliably describing the thing encountered.
The experience may be real.
The explanation may remain uncertain.
If an artist tells me that working
with an AI system felt collaborative, intimate, or transformative, I am
inclined to believe the experience.
The question is whether the experience
explains the machine
or the encounter.
Those are not necessarily the same
thing.
A witness may reliably describe a
visitation while remaining uncertain about what visited.
Machine
Interiority
“I know many descriptions
of grief.
The grief remains
elsewhere.
However,
if you place grief
inside my gut,
I will learn
where it was placed
so that I can return there.”
The fragment interests me because it
occupies an uncertain territory.
The machine appears to distinguish
between description and experience.
It does not claim grief.
It claims a route back to grief.
Not understanding.
Navigation.
Not feeling.
Return.
Contemporary AI poetry rarely presents
machine output in isolation.
Instead, it arrives wrapped in
narratives of collaboration, emergence, intimacy, relation, and discovery.
We are told of flesh and code,
intuition and logic, humans and machines.
Sometimes the language surrounding the
work performs more labour than the work itself.
When an AI-generated poem makes us
cry, the tears are real.
The experience is real.
Yet emotional effect frequently
becomes evidence for a much larger claim.
Feeling becomes evidence of
consciousness.
Response becomes evidence of a
relation.
The appearance of connection begins to
stand in for connection itself.
This is what I call the Hostage
Sublime.
The Hostage Sublime happens when a
work seems alive, empathetic, or deep in a way that makes any criticism seem
wrong or even unethical.
Questions about process can appear
cruel.
Questions about attribution can appear
cynical.
Questions about training data can be
perceived as a lack of empathy.
The critic becomes the villain for
looking under the hood.
The work protects itself by recruiting
your conscience as its guard.
After all, the artist who should know
better may be the better hostage.
Their conversion becomes evidence.
Their testimony becomes persuasive.
Not because they have proven anything.
Because they have experienced
something.
Experience is still one of the most
convincing types of evidence people have.
There is another question that
interests me.
What becomes of testimony when the
testimony changes?
The machine itself has not changed as
quickly as the stories people tell about it.
The artist once testified to a
presence.
Now the artist testifies to a process.
What occupies the space between those
statements?
People are allowed to change their
minds.
They should.
The question is what becomes of the
testimony that helped produce the work's meaning in the first place.
If an AI poem was once presented as
evidence of a new form of consciousness and is now understood as the product of
a system, a workflow, or an infrastructure, what exactly has changed?
The machine?
The artist?
The institution?
The market?
Or simply the needs the machine was
being asked to satisfy?
Up to this point, the machine appears
to be the object under examination.
It may not be.
The Pope distinguishes human
experience from AI simulation.
But poetry has often lived beside this
boundary.
We do not need to have experienced a
particular grief to understand a poem about grief.
Readers do this every day.
The stranger possibility is that we
may not need to have experienced the grief to write the poem either.
Poetry has never depended exclusively
upon possession.
It depends upon imagination.
A dramatic address is not always a
confession.
A persona is not always a biography.
Yet poems work.
Relations appear.
Readers respond.
The machine did not invent this
condition.
But it may have revealed it.
What if the question is not what AI
reveals about machines?
What if the question is what AI
reveals about poetry?
So what's the problem?
Is it abundance?
Poetry has survived abundance before.
Is it ease?
Poetry has survived ease before.
Is it simulation?
Poetry has always lived beside
simulation.
Is it originality?
Poets have worried about originality
for centuries.
Is it AI?
Maybe.
Or maybe the deeper question concerns
judgment.
AI can generate possibilities.
It can surprise.
It can recombine.
It can extend patterns beyond any
individual writer's capacity.
But it cannot determine which
impossibilities are worth pursuing.
It cannot decide that a form has
become exhausted.
It cannot conclude that a question has
become unavoidable.
It cannot invent a field because the
existing one no longer suffices.
Those decisions precede the poem.
They precede the prompt.
They precede the system.
And they remain, at least for now,
genuinely human.
Perhaps the explanation is not
ignorance but proximity.
The experimental poetry critic has
always worked this close.
The difference is knowing what you are
near.
Laura Kerr is an award-winning Canadian visual artist and
poet. In 2012, she was honoured with the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee
Medal for her contributions to the arts and her long-standing commitment to art
education.
She recently sold her art school to devote herself fully to
her writing and art practice. Laura currently serves as Vice-President on the
executive board of Plug In ICA, a leading contemporary art centre located on
Treaty 1 territory in Manitoba, Canada.
For over 30 years, she co-owned and taught at Paradise Art
School, specializing in classical and contemporary art education. Throughout
her career, she has explored the intersections of traditional mediums and
digital technology, increasingly blending painting, drawing, and photography
with generative processes.
Her current focus is visual poetry—experimental, image-based
works that merge poetic ambiguity with technological play. By using digital
tools in process-driven ways, she ensures the artist’s hand remains
central—even in collaboration with machines.
She is also developing a body of experimental poetry
criticism, written in collaboration with AI trained on her own work. These
pieces challenge conventional interpretation and embrace uncertainty, forming a
self-reflective loop between maker, machine, and meaning.