Pope Leo XIV
Magnifica Humanitas §122
The Limit, the Heart and the Grandeur of the Human Person
Magnifica Humanitas: On Safeguarding the Human Person in the Time of Artificial Intelligence
122 Finitude, when truly accepted, does not diminish us but opens us to recognizing the face of God and others. Indeed, precisely because we experience limits — vulnerability, suffering and failure — we can recognize the inviolable dignity of every person, both our own and that of others. In this same experience, we remain capable of intuiting a fraternity greater than ourselves and of perceiving injustice as a scandal. Authentic culture and art preserve this spark, resisting the normalization of evil. For this reason, certain works have taken on an almost prophetic significance: Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony can be seen as a desire for unity; Guernica as a denunciation of dehumanization; Schindler’s List as a call not to consign the past to oblivion.
Source: Magnifica Humanitas (Vatican.va)