Guardiola's scolding and the Pope's encyclical

Pep Guardiola has retired amidst the admired recognition of everyone, who have proclaimed him the best coach of the last 20 years and one of the most influential in the history of football, after how he made Barça, Bayern and City play and win, with a model that more than creating a school has marked a before and after for Pep. (That they didn't recognize it in Madrid before caused me perplexity and then made me laugh. Now it causes me great spiritual comfort because I see the coherence in it: there is nothing more provincial and stingy than believing yourself the center of the world, and Madrid-Club and Madrid-Ayuso speak as if the sun had not set in Flanders many centuries ago.)Excuse the digression. What I meant to say is that these days on social media there's a scolding from Guardiola to his players after a lost game played with a terrible attitude. The dressing-down he gives them is epic. But it has nothing to do with big data, or whiteboards, or footballing concepts, or "you didn't follow the instructions I gave you." It's born from the monumental, human anger of someone who feels disappointed, almost betrayed, and wants that game to have consequences: the boss is very angry, we need to get to it.You can ask artificial intelligence to write you a scolding or whatever it may be, and it will come out well-articulated but flat, because it will not have arisen from natural intelligence, from commitment to work, from a sense of responsibility, from personal knowledge of a group, from accumulated personal experience. It seems that Leo XIV writes about all this in his first encyclical, Magnifica humanitas, which is presented today. AI is so useful that it can make us believe it can replace us. But it lacks the moral authority, the head and the heart that allow us to decide that today is the day to slam our fist on the table.