Artificial intelligence has rapidly become a planetary infrastructure for producing symbols: language, images, classifications, predictions, rankings, recommendations, simulations, and decisions. Yet symbolic intelligence is not wisdom, fluency is not truth, prediction is not judgment, personalization is not relationship, and optimization is not flourishing. This white paper applies the life-coherent framework developed in The Tears of Life to artificial intelligence as a defining test case of the present age. It argues that AI becomes harmful when its symbolic power is structurally coupled to commercial extraction, institutional control, immature human desire, surveillance architectures, and life-blind metrics. In such cases, AI functions as oracle, idol, or enclosure: it invites surrender of judgment, receives excessive trust and sacrifice, or captures the conditions of human meaning-making. Conversely, AI becomes life-coherent when governed as a bounded tool and shared commons in service of human agency, ecological limits, public truth, education, care, democratic participation, and systemic repair. The paper proposes a life-capacity test for AI governance and a practical framework for evaluating whether AI systems restore or disable the conditions through which life continues, recovers, and flourishes.