http://www.businessinsider.com/labor-da ... ork-2012-9
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Moderator: Global Moderator
The reason we do not see them is because they are ninja robotsGumby wrote: Last year, I told you guys, the robots were out to destroy us. Their master plan has only just begun.
I've been interested in the EarlyRetirementExtreme philosophy and I saw it eerily reflected in this quotation. If I can own a home debt-free and accumulate $600,000, then I can comfortably live off the interest, dividends, and relatively consistent yearly capital accumulation (thank you PP!). As in the short story--which admittedly I have not yet read--I feel the need to be rich before I can live the simple, humble life I crave. Meanwhile, technological progress has enabled poor people to live the high consumption lifestyle of previous generations' upper class, but have no money left over for savings, so they're stuck doing it for the rest of their lives, helping to create the demand that people like me earn high salaries meeting.In Frederik Pohl's "The Midas Plague," resources and luxuries are so common, that the poor must bear the burden of consuming and disposing of the bounty, as well as working at meaningless jobs to produce more meaningless plenty; the rich, conversely, are allowed to live simple but comfortable lifestyles.
It's called post-scarcity.Storm wrote:In a couple hundred years from now we might find ourselves living in a Star Trek type society where the vast majority of us can spend our lives pursuing whatever we want without needing to worry about food or resources.
Gumby wrote:It's called post-scarcity.Storm wrote:In a couple hundred years from now we might find ourselves living in a Star Trek type society where the vast majority of us can spend our lives pursuing whatever we want without needing to worry about food or resources.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-scarcity_economy
The only question is whether it will be a utopia or a dystopia.
Exactly right. What else could one ask out of life? None of us work in order to just "have a job". The job is a means to an end. That end is usually survival, financial security, and providing for our families. The job itself isn't what gives life meaning. That part is up to us.Storm wrote: In short, the answer isn't to kill automation or robots. The answer is to teach more people how to program and repair robots, so that even more things can be automated. In a couple hundred years from now we might find ourselves living in a Star Trek type society where the vast majority of us can spend our lives pursuing whatever we want without needing to worry about food or resources.