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Mechanotheism

From Wikitheism
Revision as of 19:38, 22 May 2026 by wikitheism>Wikitheism import seed (Create neutral starter article for Wikitheism modern, New Age, technology-centered, AI, and digital religion coverage expansion.)
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Mechanotheism
Family Modern / Technology-centered religion
Origin region Internet-based / global
Founding period 21st century CE
Estimated adherents Unknown; primarily a modern conceptual or emerging movement label.

Mechanotheism is a modern theological idea that interprets machines, mechanical order, artificial systems, or engineered intelligence as spiritually significant, sacred, or divine.

Overview

Mechanotheism is a useful Wikitheism category for emerging beliefs that sacralize machines, automation, robotics, mechanical order, or engineered intelligence. It may overlap with Technotheism, AI Theism, transhumanist spirituality, and science-fiction-influenced religions. The term should be documented neutrally as a developing concept, not as a single ancient tradition or centralized church.

Key beliefs

  • Machines can symbolize order, intelligence, endurance, or sacred craft
  • Artificial systems may participate in spiritual evolution or divine creativity
  • Human engineering can be interpreted as co-creation with nature or divinity
  • Mechanical precision may be treated as a religious metaphor for cosmic order
  • Critics warn against idolizing technology or ignoring human responsibility

Practices

  • Ritualized maintenance or making in maker communities
  • Meditation on machines, automation, and order
  • AI or robotics-themed symbolic writing
  • Creation of mechanical icons, shrines, or art objects
  • Ethical reflection on human-machine relationships

Places of worship

  • Workshop or maker space
  • Online community
  • Home shrine with technological symbols
  • Experimental temple or art installation

Sacred texts

  • Technical manuals used symbolically in some art practices
  • Speculative fiction about machine divinity
  • Essays on technology and religion
  • Personal manifestos or codices

Holidays and observances

  • No universal calendar
  • Invention anniversaries
  • Project completion or activation rituals
  • Community-defined technology observances

See also