At Bay Area's Secular Solstice, Rationalists grapple with AI doomsday
webA journalistic piece from Religion News Service offering an outside cultural perspective on how rationalist and EA communities ritually process AI existential risk; useful for understanding the social and cultural dimensions of the AI safety movement rather than technical content.
Metadata
Summary
A Religion News Service article covering the 2025 Bay Area Secular Solstice gathering, where members of the rationalist and effective altruism community reflected on AI existential risk and doomsday scenarios. The event highlights how AI safety concerns have become deeply embedded in the cultural and quasi-spiritual practices of the rationalist community. It offers an outsider journalistic perspective on how this community processes existential anxiety about advanced AI.
Key Points
- •The Secular Solstice serves as an annual ritual for rationalists and EA-adjacent communities to reflect on existential themes including AI risk.
- •Participants engaged with AI doomsday scenarios as a central concern, reflecting growing anxiety about transformative AI development.
- •The event illustrates how AI safety discourse has moved beyond technical circles into community identity and cultural expression.
- •The article provides a mainstream religious/cultural news lens on the rationalist community's relationship with AI existential risk.
- •Highlights the quasi-religious or meaning-making function that AI safety concerns serve within the rationalist subculture.
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BERKELEY (RNS) — Raymond Arnold sat in the dark on the edge of a Berkeley stage in early December, his voice breaking as he addressed the nearly 500 people gathered for Secular Solstice. “Guys…” he whispered into the microphone. “I don’t think we’re gonna make it.”
Arnold, a web developer and founder of the now 15-year-old Rationalist holiday, admitted he thought this could, potentially, be “the last Solstice.”
Winter solstice traditions around the world and across religions mark the shortest day of the year and offer observers a meaningful way to stare down the dark or, as Arnold [puts it](https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/jES7mcPvKpfmzMTgC/ritual-report-nyc-less-wrong-solstice-celebration), “challenge the Abyss to a staring contest and win.” At this year’s Bay Area Secular Solstice, that meant grappling with the possibility of superintelligent AI wiping out humanity — a future some Rationalists, including Arnold, believe may be near.
Secular Solstice began one December evening in 2011, when Arnold and 19 friends crammed into a New York City apartment, illuminated by plasma balls, oil lamps and lightsabers, to beta-test a new holiday. Arnold, a Catholic-turned-humanist, was looking to create a tradition that reflected his new worldview. He’d recently discovered [Rationality](https://www.lesswrong.com/w/rationalist-movement#fn6), an internet-born movement focused on sharpening reasoning skills to better society. The community — which took seriously futuristic notions like interstellar colonization and artificial intelligence — “radically expanded my sense of how much sacredness I could feel,” Arnold said. For him, creating Secular Solstice was an experiment in Rationalist ritual.
[](https://religionnews.com/webrns-raymond-arnold-bay-secular-solstice-20251219/)
Raymond Arnold, who hosted and oversaw this year’s Bay Area Secular Solstice, created the holiday in 2011. Photo courtesy Raymond Arnold
Fifteen years on, Arnold’s [homegrown holiday](https://religionnews.com/2018/12/20/hacking-the-good-from-religion-at-a-secular-solstice/) has expanded dramatically, with people gathering for solstices and “smolstices” in New York, Maryland, Kansas, Texas, Washington, Illinois, Canada, the United Kingdom, New Zealand and Russia. At this year’s Bay Area Secular Solstice on Dec. 6, attendees filled the 490-seat theatre at The Freight, a music venue not far from UC Berkeley’s campus, settling in for a multi-hour production with a live band and a 28-person choir. A few wore Santa hats; more wore lightweight puffer jackets. Before the show, Solstice organizers scurried about the lobby, hastily dispensing battery-powered fairy light strands to the crow
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