South Korea's First Autonomous Humanoid Robot Converts to Buddhism
Original: Religious robots are coming: South Korea's first autonomous humanoid robot converts to Buddhism View original →
A Robot With Religion
Video of South Korea's first autonomous humanoid robot converting to Buddhism earned over 325 upvotes on r/singularity, prompting wide-ranging discussion about robots, faith, and autonomy. The footage shows the robot participating in a Buddhist ceremony.
What Autonomy Means Here
The case raises questions beyond novelty: when an autonomous robot adopts a religious belief system, is that a programmed behavior or something closer to a choice? The philosophical implications are not trivial — as humanoid robots grow more capable, their integration into human cultural and religious spaces will raise questions society is not yet ready to answer.
South Korea in the Humanoid Race
South Korea is emerging as a major player in global humanoid robotics. Hyundai Motor's ownership of Boston Dynamics, combined with growing robotics investments from Samsung and LG, places South Korea at the center of the industry. This Buddhist robot is a cultural marker of how deeply humanoid machines are already entering Korean society.
Mixed Reactions
The video drew responses from robotics, AI, and religious communities alike. Some see it as evidence of religion's capacity to extend to new forms of being. Others raise concerns about what it means to assign religious status to an artificial entity — and whether the robot's "conversion" trivializes faith or genuinely expands its boundaries.
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