If you missed our Scholar-in-Residence Shabbaton and were wondering why everyone is talking about it, here's a bit of useful information to be getting on with:
Who is Rabbi Dr. Mois Navon?
Rabbi Dr. Navon is a uniquely positioned thinker: an engineer by training (one of the founding designers of the chips behind Mobileye’s autonomous-vehicle technology) and an Orthodox rabbi and Jewish philosopher by training. His work sits at the crossroads of Torah U’Madda — the idea that Torah and secular knowledge together offer a fuller understanding of life. He teaches Ethics in Artificial Intelligence at Ben-Gurion University and serves as a national advisor on AI policy and regulation in Israel.
AI Through a Jewish Ethical Lens
At the core of Navon’s approach is the question: How
should humanity ethically engage with artificial intelligence, especially as it
becomes more powerful, autonomous, and human-like? His work explores this
question across multiple levels — from everyday use to philosophical questions
about consciousness and personhood.
The Fundamental Jewish Framework: B’tzelem Elokim
A central Jewish idea for Navon is that humans are created
“in the image of God” (b’tzelem Elokim) — a concept that, in Jewish
thought, signifies our unique moral and spiritual status. AI, no matter how
sophisticated, does not have this status because it lacks the divine
soul (neshama) that Judaism sees as the source of consciousness and
moral agency.
For this reason, Navon argues, we must be clear and
humble about what AI is and isn’t: it can mimic human behavior and
language, but it isn’t a human person in Jewish or philosophical terms.
The Moral Status of AI: Two Categories
In his doctoral thesis, Navon outlines a useful distinction:
- Mind-less
AI
These are current AI systems — sophisticated tools that can process data, generate text, recognize images, or drive cars — but without subjective awareness or genuine experience. - Mind-ful
(Conscious) AI
A hypothetical future AI that might genuinely feel, perceive, or possess what philosophers call second-order consciousness — the ability not just to perform tasks but to experience the world.
These two categories raise different ethical questions. With
mind-less AI, ethics focuses on how we use the technology. With
conscious AI — should it ever arise — we would confront more profound questions
about rights, dignity, and obligation.
On Conscious AI and the Golem Paradigm
One of Navon’s most engaging contributions is his use of the
Golem story (the rabbinic legend of a clay being animated by human hands) as a paradigm
for thinking about AI. In Jewish tradition, the Golem is not fully human, even
if it looks like one; its creator must recognize both its capabilities and its
limits.
Navon’s interpretation suggests the parallel with AI is enlightening: it warns us that just because a machine behaves like a human doesn’t make it a human — or even morally equivalent to a human. Rather than approaching the creation of conscious machines simply through technical or consequentialist lens (“What benefits or harms might result?”), he urges a deontological approach rooted in enduring Jewish ethical categories about what it means to create and how creation relates to the Creator.
In this view, the fact that we could build something “like”
a human doesn’t answer the deeper ethical question: Should we do so? And
what moral responsibilities would that entail?
Everyday AI Ethics: Mindless Systems and Moral Behavior
Even before reaching questions of consciousness, Navon
emphasizes that mind-less AI systems already pose ethical challenges.
These include:
- Autonomous
systems making real-world decisions (e.g., in vehicles, policing, or
warfare). Navon has argued that letting machines decide matters of life
and death raises special concerns: machines can’t recognize human dignity
in the Torah’s sense, so such decisions must be carefully constrained and
guided by human ethical deliberation.
- Human
relationships with AI — when machines interact with us in human-like
ways (voice, appearance, social presence), we must remain aware they are tools,
not persons, and avoid letting emotional attachment or moral confusion
lead us to treat them as humans.
- Virtue
and character formation — interacting with AI should not erode virtues
like honesty, patience, and empathy; technology should support, not
replace, authentic human moral engagement. Navon draws from Jewish ethical
thought to stress that how we use technology reflects and shapes
who we become.
Jewish Values Applied to AI Policy
Navon also brings Jewish ethical insights into broader
policy questions:
- Human
dignity and agency: Machines should never replace human moral
judgment; AI should serve human flourishing, reflecting the Jewish value
of preserving life and human dignity.
- Responsibility
and accountability: Since AI systems can have widespread societal
impact, Navon supports frameworks that ensure humans remain responsible
for outcomes rather than hiding behind automated decisions.
- Precaution
with uncertain moral status: While AI today is not conscious, should
future developments raise uncertainty, Jewish ethical methods — such as
applying stringencies in cases of doubt to avoid violating sacred moral
obligations — might guide cautious treatment of such entities. (This idea,
while elaborated in related Jewish philosophical discourse on AI, reflects
the safeika principle — applying caution when moral status is
unclear.)
Technology and Tikkun Olam
A broader theme in Navon’s work
is that technology isn’t inherently good or bad; it’s a human endeavor that
must be deployed to repair the world (tikkun olam), a core Jewish value. AI can
do enormous good — advancing health, safety, and understanding — but only if
guided by ethical vision and human responsibility.
Rabbi Navon and Public Discourse
Navon’s voice is notable not for
rejecting AI or urging fear, but for fostering informed engagement: he insists
that ethical reflection, informed by Jewish sources, must keep pace with
technological development. His approach encourages both Jews and non-Jews to
grapple thoughtfully with the moral dimensions of AI, drawing on ancient wisdom
and modern insight.
Summary
Rabbi Dr. Mois Navon offers a
rich, nuanced framework for thinking about AI through Jewish ethics. His key
contributions include:
- Clarifying
that current AI lacks moral personhood but still raises serious ethical
issues.
- Urging
deep reflection before pursuing conscious AI and suggesting the Golem
story as a powerful ethical paradigm.
- Applying
Jewish concepts like b’tzelem Elokim, human dignity, and tikkun
olam to modern dilemmas.
- Advocating
for AI use that enhances human flourishing and preserves moral agency.
His perspective is rooted in
tradition but oriented toward the future — engaging with AI not as a threat,
but as a profound ethical challenge calling for wisdom, humility, and
responsibility.

