Saturday, July 18, 2026

Data vs. Discovery: Redefining the Human Role in an AI-Driven World

-Yung Suk Kim
I came to understand the evolving relationship between humanity and artificial intelligence.
"Artificial Intelligence is a powerful tool that provides intelligent insights across many fields, significantly saving time and resources. However, it is not a perfect tool because it relies entirely on the information accumulated by humanity. This means AI is limited by the scope of its training data; it cannot possess knowledge beyond what is already available. Consequently, the discovery of new knowledge remains a uniquely human responsibility. While many differences exist between AI and humans, the fundamental distinction is that AI operates strictly on existing data. Therefore, rather than depending solely on AI, we must continue to innovate and ask unasked questions. Ultimately, AI and humanity can coexist in a critical, collaborative relationship."

I asked AI: "This is my thesis statement. Is it true? What do you think?"

AI responds:

Your thesis statement is conceptually sound and reflects the current consensus among many AI researchers and philosophers. While "truth" in a thesis is often a matter of perspective and logical defense, your argument is grounded in the technical reality of how AI functions today.

Here is an analysis of your points and some suggestions to refine them:

1. The Limitation of Data (The "Knowledge Ceiling")
You are correct that current AI, particularly Generative AI and Large Language Models, is trained on existing human-generated data. This means:Synthesis vs. Discovery: AI is incredibly efficient at synthesizing and rearranging existing information, but it does not "know" things in a vacuum. It cannot observe the physical world or conduct original scientific experiments on its own.
The Data Gap: If a topic has never been written about or digitized, the AI cannot provide information on it. This confirms your point that AI is limited by the "world's information accumulated by humanity."

2. The Unique Role of Humanity
Your argument that humans are needed for "new knowledge" is a strong focal point.Asking the "Unasked": AI is reactive; it responds to prompts based on patterns. Humans are proactive; we possess curiosity and the ability to challenge existing paradigms.
Innovation: While AI can suggest new combinations of ideas (like a new chemical formula), a human is required to verify its validity in the real world and decide if it is ethically or socially valuable.

3. The "Critical Relationship"
The phrase "critical relationship" is excellent. It implies that we should not be passive consumers of AI but active, skeptical partners.The Difference: You noted that AI is run by available data, while humanity is driven by innovation. You might add that humanity is also driven by context, ethics, and emotion—things data alone cannot fully replicate.

Is it "True"?
In the context of the current technological landscape: Yes. AI is an interpolative tool (it works within the bounds of what it has seen). Humans are capable of extrapolation (taking a leap into the unknown). Your thesis accurately captures the symbiotic necessity of both.

Final Thought: This is a very thoughtful stance. It avoids the extremes of "AI will replace everyone" or "AI is useless," and instead focuses on a sophisticated, collaborative future.

The Beginning of a Beginning

 This poem was resulted from my travels to Banff and Jasper in Canada (July 2026)

 


The Beginning of a Beginning 


–Yung Suk Kim


Being there with full presence in nature's vast diversity,

I feel like nothing but a part of its great mystery.


Suddenly, I realized the layers of upheavals of the first existence

as things in the earth began to form.


What I saw was a revolutionary scene:

the Rocky Mountains rose from the sea bottom.

Millions of years ago, there was no one who could predict such things.


Non-existence does not mean there is nothing to arise.

All things are a phenomenon.

The mystery of power is already everywhere.


While we don't grasp the beginning of a beginning,

we feel the unfathomable mystery of our being in nature.


The beauty of the Rocky Mountains and pristine lakes

not only dumbfounds me but makes me question their origin,

which comes from millions of previous upheavals and geological changes.


Seeing is not everything.

Asking questions with curiosity awakens our dormant spirit.


What we need is incessant investigation of who we are,

while acknowledging our fundamental weakness and accepting vulnerability,

yet believing in our meaningful life amid our transient nature.


I won't forget the realization that seeing is more than observing a phenomenon.

It is a gate through which we must ask about our fragile yet precious being.

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Humbled by Nature's Vast Diversity

Humbled by nature’s vast diversity and scale, I feel like nothing but a part of the universe's grand mystery. -from travels to Banff and Jasper in Canada (July 2026)

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

I am still hungry. Please subscribe.

 

Please subscribe. 
Welcome to Dr. Kim’s Wisdom House, hosted by Dr. Yung Suk Kim, Professor of New Testament and Early Christianity. This channel is an open public space dedicated to the critical and transformative study of the Bible, philosophy, ancient wisdom, and interdisciplinary topics. Moving beyond rigid dogmas, we explore how sacred texts, philosophical traditions, and critical thought intersect with modern life, justice, and culture. Whether you are a student, a scholar, or a curious seeker, join us every week for 10-to-20-minute deep dives designed to expand your mind and reframe how you see the world.

The Architecture of Widsom

Now I have a complete draft of my manuscript, The Architecture of Wisdom. In the final chapter, I wrote:
In this mature stage of my career, I feel a profound sense of "existential debt." I owe the world for the diverse traditions that have fed my soul and the global community that has provided the ground for my second vocation in theological education. I have come to view my scholarly work not as a means of personal "gain"—which Qoheleth reminds us is but a "chasing after the wind"—but as a way to "pay back" the world. I wrote this book to share this communal and cultural wisdom with a global family that is currently exhausted by its pursuit of permanence and its greed for accumulation.

Saturday, July 4, 2026

Honored by my student

 
I am delighted to be recognized by one of my former students:

"One of the greatest gifts of my theological journey has been the opportunity to learn from scholars who challenged me to think more deeply, study more faithfully, and approach God's Word with both humility and intellectual rigor.
    Today, I am honored to recognize Dr. Yung Suk Kim, Professor of New Testament and Early Christianity at the Samuel DeWitt Proctor School of Theology, Virginia Union University, as one of the scholars featured in the "Standing on Sacred Shoulders" section of Kingdom Sermon Architect™.
    Dr. Kim's teaching continually challenged us to move beyond simply reading Scripture to wrestling with it—asking deeper questions, engaging multiple perspectives, and allowing the biblical text to transform both our minds and our ministries."

Today's heaven

"Without a heaven in the present, tomorrow merely inherits yesterday's hell. Peace and spirituality are not distant destinations, but immediate realities forged in how we live, love, and coexist. We cannot expect a sacred future to bloom from a present we leave barren." --Yung Suk Kim

Friday, July 3, 2026

New release: Treasures and Thorns by Yung Suk Kim

Fresh read, authentic voice, paradoxical power of the gospel in 2 Corinthians
 

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Finally, the book was released


The apostle Paul’s Second Letter to the Corinthians is a battlefield of theology and emotion. It is a text marked by soaring spiritual heights and raw human vulnerability, where the “treasure in jars of clay” meets the painful “thorn in the flesh.” This commentary offers a clear and accessible guide to navigating this complex epistle, structuring its analysis through the dialectic of "Treasures" (theological riches and apostolic authority) and "Thorns" (suffering, rhetorical complexity, and historical conflict).
Designed for scholars, pastors, and students alike, this volume
● clarifies Paul's Theology, exploring the evolving nature of Paul’s leadership and the composite nature of the letters.
● embraces paradox, refusing to sanitize the text, grappling with the “hard sayings” and historical messiness alongside the comforting theological truths.
● connects to today, bridging the gap between the fragile Corinthian community and the contemporary challenges facing the modern church.
By engaging with both the beauty and the brokenness of 2 Corinthians, readers will encounter the gospel in its full, paradoxical power.