Atlantic Pacf.
Back from the dead
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- Jul 20, 2012
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A few days ago, the famous Youtuber CGP Grey posted a video, in which he predicts the future automation brings. Below is the video, and here is the transcript.
Link to video.
What Grey is saying is that just like how previous technological advances have obsoleted entire categories of jobs previously, the rise of computerization, automation, and mechanization today will obsolete entire job categories today. To give a number, he says that 45% of today's employees - at minimum - could become unemployable due to this. And it's not like previous technological revolutions in which people can take up other jobs; not only would unskilled and white-collar professions become unemployable, professions (eg. doctors and lawyers) and even creative professions will be affected.
Obviously, such a technological revolution would cause incredible amounts of social upheaval, including literal revolutions. Part of the problem today is the concept of one's "worth in life" coming from one's job. If an economy no longer needs large number of workers to function, and that the newly-unemployed masses theoretically no longer need jobs to have a decent standard of living, then what? What would said masses do to bring purpose to their lives? And what if these masses can't have decent standards of living, for whatever reason? (Eg. greed) We could very well have many violent revolutions springing up across the globe, one that precludes us from achieving a post-scarcity society due to us destroying ourselves.
There has been talk about such a topic previously in this sub-forum; there was a thread on automated cars ("autos," as Grey calls them) previously (of which I'm too lazy to dig up). From that thread, it is clear that the transition from "automobiles" to "autos" will not be immediate; not only would the necessary infrastructure have to be built, but people would not like them. Even if "autos" are less dangerous than regular cars (which Grey implies), people are irrational, and many would not accept them until their accident rate is precisely 0%. And I'm sure that it's the same case for various other technologies. But because these new toys are far more efficient than their human-powered predecessors, they will come eventually. Whether if it takes ten or a hundred years (another caveat of the video; Grey gives no timeframe), it will most likely be inevitable.
I disagree with Grey's assertion that even creative jobs would be obsoleted. Sure, bots may be able to write music, but does that matter? First, volume doesn't matter; it's already impossible to listen to all the music composed by all the human musicians out there, let alone be able to hear the entirety of the plethora of future computer-generated music. But more importantly, people want to create. Even if being creative is useless for the economy, making fine art, composing music, authoring novels, pushing the frontiers of science, and exploring the depths of history are things that people want to do. Of course, they'll probably be outnumbered by the people who simply want to lounge around and play video games/chat on social media/watch TV, but in a post-scarcity automated economy, is that necessarily a bad thing? (In my opinion, people who say "yes" are not going to be of much help during the transition.)
So what do you guys think? What would be the shape of things to come, in terms of society and economics? Do any of Grey's musings go against what you consider "common sense," and are patently unrealistic? Did my rambling bore or confuse you? Discuss!
Link to video.
What Grey is saying is that just like how previous technological advances have obsoleted entire categories of jobs previously, the rise of computerization, automation, and mechanization today will obsolete entire job categories today. To give a number, he says that 45% of today's employees - at minimum - could become unemployable due to this. And it's not like previous technological revolutions in which people can take up other jobs; not only would unskilled and white-collar professions become unemployable, professions (eg. doctors and lawyers) and even creative professions will be affected.
Obviously, such a technological revolution would cause incredible amounts of social upheaval, including literal revolutions. Part of the problem today is the concept of one's "worth in life" coming from one's job. If an economy no longer needs large number of workers to function, and that the newly-unemployed masses theoretically no longer need jobs to have a decent standard of living, then what? What would said masses do to bring purpose to their lives? And what if these masses can't have decent standards of living, for whatever reason? (Eg. greed) We could very well have many violent revolutions springing up across the globe, one that precludes us from achieving a post-scarcity society due to us destroying ourselves.
There has been talk about such a topic previously in this sub-forum; there was a thread on automated cars ("autos," as Grey calls them) previously (of which I'm too lazy to dig up). From that thread, it is clear that the transition from "automobiles" to "autos" will not be immediate; not only would the necessary infrastructure have to be built, but people would not like them. Even if "autos" are less dangerous than regular cars (which Grey implies), people are irrational, and many would not accept them until their accident rate is precisely 0%. And I'm sure that it's the same case for various other technologies. But because these new toys are far more efficient than their human-powered predecessors, they will come eventually. Whether if it takes ten or a hundred years (another caveat of the video; Grey gives no timeframe), it will most likely be inevitable.
I disagree with Grey's assertion that even creative jobs would be obsoleted. Sure, bots may be able to write music, but does that matter? First, volume doesn't matter; it's already impossible to listen to all the music composed by all the human musicians out there, let alone be able to hear the entirety of the plethora of future computer-generated music. But more importantly, people want to create. Even if being creative is useless for the economy, making fine art, composing music, authoring novels, pushing the frontiers of science, and exploring the depths of history are things that people want to do. Of course, they'll probably be outnumbered by the people who simply want to lounge around and play video games/chat on social media/watch TV, but in a post-scarcity automated economy, is that necessarily a bad thing? (In my opinion, people who say "yes" are not going to be of much help during the transition.)
So what do you guys think? What would be the shape of things to come, in terms of society and economics? Do any of Grey's musings go against what you consider "common sense," and are patently unrealistic? Did my rambling bore or confuse you? Discuss!
Spoiler :
Some relevant points from the transcript:
On white collar labor and "self learning" bots:
On Automating Law and Medicine:
On Bots and Creativity:
On white collar labor and "self learning" bots:
Even ignoring the problem of pushing a hundred-million additional people through higher education, white-collar work is no safe haven either. If your job is sitting in front of a screen and typing and clicking -- like maybe you're supposed to be doing right now -- the bots are coming for you too, buddy.
Software bots are both intangible and way faster and cheaper than physical robots. Given that white collar workers are, from a companies perspective, both more expensive and more numerous -- the incentive to automate their work is greater than low skilled work.
And that's just what automation engineers are for. These are skilled programmers whose entire job is to replace your job with a software bot.
You may think even the world's smartest automation engineer could never make a bot to do your job -- and you may be right -- but the cutting edge of programming isn't super-smart programmers writing bots it's super-smart programmers writing bots that teach themselves how to do things the programmer could never teach them to do.
How that works is well beyond the scope of this video, but the bottom line is there are limited ways to show a bot a bunch of stuff to do, show the bot a bunch of correctly done stuff, and it can figure out how to do the job to be done.
On Automating Law and Medicine:
When you think 'lawyer' it's easy to think of trials. But the bulk of lawyering is actually drafting legal documents predicting the likely outcome and impact of lawsuits, and something called 'discovery' which is where boxes of paperwork gets dumped on the lawyers and they need to find the pattern or the one out-of-place transaction among it all.
This can all be bot work. Discovery, in particular, is already not a human job in many firms. Not because there isn't paperwork to go through, there's more of it than ever, but because clever research bots sift through millions of emails and memos and accounts in hours not weeks -- crushing human researchers in terms of not just cost and time but, most importantly, accuracy. Bots don't get sleeping reading through a million emails...
Just as Auto dont need to be perfect -- they just need to make fewer mistakes than humans, -- the same goes for doctor bots...
Human doctors can only improve through their own experiences. Doctor bots can learn from the experiences of every doctor bot. [They] Can read the latest in medical research and keep track of everything that happens to all his patients world-wide and make correlations that would be impossible to find otherwise.
Not all doctors will go away, but when doctor bots are comparable to humans and they're only as far away as your phone -- the need for general doctors will be less.
On Bots and Creativity:
But perhaps you're still not worried because you're a special creative snowflakes. Well guess what? You're not that special...
There is this notion that just as mechanical muscles allowed us to move into thinking jobs that mechanical minds will allow us all to move into creative work. But even if we assume the human mind is magically creative -- it's not, but just for the sake of argument -- artistic creativity isn't what the majority of jobs depend on. The number of writers and poets and directors and actors and artist who actually make a living doing their work is a tiny, tiny portion of the labor force. And given that these are professions that are dependent on popularity they will always be a small part of the population...
Oh, by the way, this music in the background that your listening to? It was written by a bot. Her name is Emily Howel and she can write an infinite amount of new music all day for free. And people can't tell the difference between her and human composers when put to a blind test.