The TED talk was interesting, but isn't a fundamental shift in our conceptions of the meaning and purpose of life something that should have been happening since the dawn of the Industrial Revolution? A lot of the social conflicts and cognitive dissonance we currently experience in modern Western cultures is, I think, precisely due to the fact that we haven't reached a harmonious agreement on the meaning of human life. The Robotic Revolution is certainly increasing the urgency of that question, but it's a preexisting question.doodle wrote: TED talk on this topic.
http://youtu.be/kYIfeZcXA9U
Ultimately the speaker's conclusions are similar to mine....that this robotic future will fundamentally require a change in our economic system and the cultural notion that people must justify and support their existence through labor. In other words, a robot future will require us to fundamentally shift our conceptions on the meaning and purpose of life.
In the Western world, our current standard of living is so much higher than it was prior to the Industrial Revolution that most of us could easily live like people back then did by working a mere fraction of the time that they had to. The problem is that hardly anybody today wants to live like people lived back then.
In fact, most people don't even want to live like people lived one generation ago. Our preferred standard of living appears to be a very fluid, social thing. People don't just want to survive; they want to live as well or better than their neighbors.
Paradoxically, it's that very same competitive social drive that ultimately gave rise to the Industrial Revolution and now the Robotic Revolution--the revolutions that are now forcing us to confront the meaning of that competitive social drive that got us here in the first place.