Reframing digital preservation as spiritual practice of loving what cannot be directly known or verified, rather than simulating presence.
Hubb al-ghayb, love for the invisible or unseen, was central to Rabia's mysticism—the capacity to love what cannot be grasped, verified, or controlled. In digital immortality contexts, this reframes the preserved personality not as simulation of presence but as practice of loving absence. When someone engages with an AI preservation, they are not truly contacting the deceased—they are practicing relationship with an absence, a memory, a construction. Honest framing of this practice honors both the limit of what technology can do and the profound spiritual work of continuing love across death's boundary. Rather than presenting AI preservation as reunion, this framework contextualizes it as a specific spiritual technology for practicing fidelity to someone no longer available. Like prayer to an unseen divine, it involves surrender to unknowing. This shift from simulation toward spiritual practice transforms ethics: the goal becomes not perfecting the AI's accuracy but cultivating the living person's capacity for love, memory, and connection in the face of absence.
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