Londo_Jowo
Lifer
Based on the lack of artificial intelligence capable computers/robots I would say the days of robot replacing people will not be happening any time soon.
Inevitability, Mr. Anderson, Inevitability.... Not to far in from the knee of the asymptote is straight up. Imagine a program that replicates with abandon and has no idea why it exists.
Based on the lack of artificial intelligence capable computers/robots I would say the days of robot replacing people will not be happening any time soon.
This has been happening for a very long time already. A "robot" needn't be of Asimov complexity. It's a mechanical/electronic paradigm which is open ended in it's ability to replace the need for humans. Between outsourcing and "productivity" things aren't looking great for the majority of Homo Sapiens.
An interesting thing about Luddites- they were not anti-technology. They were mostly opposed to it replacing people. They were merely too early in that concern. Machines needed caring for, they made more jobs possible because of the things they could not do, but now that has changed. This wonderful "recovery", burger flippers, and walmart employees which used to be an option when all else failed. But now dozens compete for the most menial jobs. How is that a good thing?
Based on the lack of artificial intelligence capable computers/robots I would say the days of robot replacing people will not be happening any time soon.
Bartering is a part of Capitalism. Money is not the only form or capital. I dont know of any other way to say that to make it easier. I mean, paying for something is a form of trading, as you are exchanging capital/currency for goods/services.
So, you want to know why efficiency and technology has gone up, but we work more than ever eh. People want more. If I wanted a lifestyle of say the 50s, how much would I need to work? A typical middle class lifestyle would not require a 40hr week for the vast majority of people working. You want a house under 1000 square feet, that is super cheap. Want a car without power anything or AC, it can be yours. Want an AC for your house, nope, because thats for the rich.
People work because they want newer and better things. People are ok with working more, as long as they get neat things.
[...]So, at some point, robots cannot fill all human wants. Human brains are years ahead of any robot. The ability of the human brain is not even fully understood, so the idea that we can make something more powerful than it is a long way off.
The whole point seems to be that there will be a time, when people will not be able to offer enough value, to be paid by another person. Why pay a person to make my food, when I can pay a robot far less right?
Part of the answer is already obvious. Why do people still buy things in a store instead of online? People crave human interaction. [...]
It's a matter of supply and demand. The number of people who are exceptional are fewer than those who are not. It's grand if suddenly faced with unemployment everyone becomes a genius, but what if those become a dime a dozen? More people grasping at less and less. It would be a wonderful thing if we did not value people as we do but what you and I would like is irrelevant to the Darwinism which is the real world. This reality is not a meritocracy, this is who is the biggest shark. There is no use in denying it and indeed until the people at large look at what is coming they'll ultimately be discarded. Now as to what can be done? I have a couple ideas, but that all depends on rational and logical analysis and application. Can we do that? That's the biggest question of all.
For comparison, you can equate farm animals to robots. Other than construction, how are they different? They are both work multipliers used to perform tasks for people and enhance their abilities. Anyone want to try plowing a field by hand?
Did anyone decry domestication as costing jobs? Surely they do. As did mechanical tractors. Did we suddenly not be able to afford food as there are few farm jobs left? No. What happened is we were able to squeeze so much waste and effort from the process that the cost of food has plummeted and we are able to eat more than ever.
Do you think about saving and reusing nails? No, nails are cheap. But that's because we have efficient machines that make them cheap. Can you make one on your own? How long to make 1000 if so? Your cost to produce is huge.
Think about the replicators from star trek. Tell the computer what you want, and it instantly makes exactly what you want, right then. Think about what that means. No factories, no inventories, no transportation, no stores, no marketing, no black Friday sales, nothing.
What is the cost of the goods? Essentially 0! (Assume the E is free, zero point generators/graviton fields/whatever)
There is no jobs to do almost anything anymore, but your cost of living is near 0. Would those people be richer or poorer than us? Is that so horrible?
Nice, but in star trek everybody can use the replicator. And why, because people don't need to compete for the privilege.
Lol. So you think that once people are no longer needed for jobs then they will start bartering and somehow that's better than the 1950's promise/hope that new tech would bring?
I don't think you understand this thread (or maybe I don't). The point is; take capitalism to its logical conclusion and you end up with little to no labor costs selling things to an ever increasingly small consumer base. The question isn't will this happen, the question what would we do when it does happen?
All physical labor could be done by robots and it wouldn't matter. In the end people have the primary skills that still generate value - the ability to generate creative ideas, solve problems, and reorganize stale paradigms into something new. If all you have to offer is physical brawn without any grey matter to support it, you're going to get left behind in the modern world and rightfully so. We already have enough subsistence farmers on earth and don't need to add more in the U.S. which is the most innovative and creative nation on the planet.
If they be like to die they had better do so and decrease the surplus population, and rightfully so. I can imagine you saying that to your son or daughter they deserve just that because they can't keep up with mine.
I imagine he (like most people) would do what he could to prepare his kids for the real world.I can imagine you saying that to your son or daughter they deserve just that because they can't keep up with mine.
Unless you plan on offering a job to those folks with no appreciable creative skills in a labor devalued economy, then your fancy words don't mean shit and certainly don't help any more than my blunt advice. Your esteem building fake concern which offers nothing beyond best wishes and a prayer plus a welfare check ain't gonna give them a middle class lifestyle and is quite frankly coddling them with the same "you're a unique snowflake and should pursue whatever makes you happy" feelgood bullshit that's been force fed kids for the last generation.
I imagine he (like most people) would do what he could to prepare his kids for the real world.
But if they *were* unprepared for it, what's the better thing to do? Deal with them truthfully about it, or blow rainbow smoke up their asses about how special they are just for existing and then send them out into a world that absolutely *WILL NOT* treat them that way?
It's all the same pattern. Technology makes things cheaper over time. The poor in this country are still incredibly well off by global and historical standards. What counted as manors at one point would be considered shabby derilics if a modern builder built it new for you.
The difference in wealth is growing, but overall levels of wealth has increased for everyone as costs have fallen. Part of this cost is the "waste" of labor, but forcing more labor into the process impoverishes everyone
Sorry but I just see you make a lot of assumptions toward the negative, just because what he's saying isn't some "kindler/gentler, flowery" version of the exact same reality you also seem perfectly aware of. (If you weren't, you wouldn't worry about your kids actually being prepared to 'outcompete' someone else.)Actually my children are prepared and will likely outcompete most out there. If mine eat his that's no loss in the grand scheme of thing, eh?
Actually my children are prepared and will likely outcompete most out there. If mine eat his that's no loss in the grand scheme of thing, eh?
People seem to think that they'll do well because of thinking such as he displays, but all he offers is increasing hopelessness, and can't even imagine why it's bad much less consider the situation and offer more than sacrifices to his betters.
Now if the future were to be a dreary and inhumane place why should I support that paradigm? If wanna be sharks were half as intelligent as they think they might wonder why they do just that.
I'm glad if your kids are as described, a couple less welfare cases and if they truly are out-competing others they deserve to enjoy the fruits of that. Instead you'd purposely look to knock them down a peg to ensure other kids who decide to put their brains in neutral and coast along in menial physical labor jobs don't have to not enjoy the fruits either. And LOL at you talking about "eating others" when people like you and Democrats will always be there to attempt to bail them out from their bad decisions so what difference does it make?
How are the Moties going to get to God's Eye?
It's all the same pattern. Technology makes things cheaper over time. The poor in this country are still incredibly well off by global and historical standards. What counted as manors at one point would be considered shabby derilics if a modern builder built it new for you.
The difference in wealth is growing, but overall levels of wealth has increased for everyone as costs have fallen. Part of this cost is the "waste" of labor, but forcing more labor into the process impoverishes everyone