madviking
north american scum
Artistic endeavors produced by a computer autonomous of any human input cannot meaningfully be called art.
yea, by (my) definition.
Artistic endeavors produced by a computer autonomous of any human input cannot meaningfully be called art.
Well since this will lead to massive cuts in almost all sectors of economy governments will have to make a guaranteed basic income a must. Bored jobless people are problematic, but starving jobless people are real trouble. Population growth will also probably have to level off.
Starving people are hardly a problem since they, well, starve. Nobody blinks an eye. The trick is that the only people who will ever revolt are people who perceive a reduction of living standards yet are well off enough to survive and thrive to the extent necessary to fight on.
The way I reason it is this- those who begin automization first will earn higher profits and establish monopolies. Collectively the rich own all the resources they need. Right now they don't own the labor, so in exchange for the labor, they pay with these resources indirectly through money. But if they could produce the same amount with labor that doesn't need to paid in resources, then they get to keep the resources they have. Then comes the trouble of getting a hold of the resources they don't have. So a capitalist who owns a profitable manufacturing business has all the automobiles he is ever going to need. He can then sell his automobiles to a variety of other businesses for a lot of money, and then use that money to buy resources such as food and a house from other businesses.
And as for your accusations of Marxism, I am not communist. But any economy that swings too far on favor of free market, or too far in favor of a command economy will run into trouble. That is what I believe sincerely.
Here is another consideration that might prevent things from getting too out of hand- the government. I wonder how it will deal with corporations in the future to come. I am not too optimistic on the chances of the government preventing corporations from pretty becoming their own nations with their own laws and military. Robots after all do make good soldiers. But maybe I have read Jennifer Government one time too many.
This might work for cheap consumables like bread or cereal (even the poor will still have to buy food), but for things like clothes and cars I'm doubtful. Even if you reduce overhead by eliminating your workforce, your marketplace is still going be very small. Since people don't buy cars very often, you would have to raise the cost of every car to make up for the fact that you're only selling a handful every year.
Artistic endeavors produced by a computer autonomous of any human input cannot meaningfully be called art.
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.
its gonna be asap. Everyone is so stoked about Ubering someone else's automated car. As long as I know the statistics are better than human drivers, hell even close enough, I'm game.
Screw being objectively better. I love driving and I'll be damned if I will willingly turn that privilege over to some damned johnny on the spot AI cabbie.
Screw being objectively better. I love driving and I'll be damned if I will willingly turn that privilege over to some damned johnny on the spot AI cabbie.
Some people, like you, enjoy driving for the sake of it.
Some people enjoy riding horses for the sake of it.
It's fine to lose job categories if they are replaced...
Example, horse drawn carriage driver positions went down with mass production of the car BUT then there were new jobs open to manufacture cars.
Well, I don't have a crystal ball, nor do I think that's ever going to completely happen...Sure, but what happens when we approach the precipice wherein all jobs go away as the robots do them better than all of us?
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To be honest though, I don't see robots replacing everyone unless and until they are fully sentient, i.e. true artificial intelligences. At this point though, we have to ask ourselves are we going to enslave them to do the work for us? Because you can't guarantee that they will just do all the work of their own volition - being intelligent means you have your own priorities, wants and needs.
So making robots only to do labor does amount to slavery, with the caveat that they were *created* to do the work. But then I can imagine some genteel southern plantation owner claiming he *created* his workforce through clever forced-breeding back in the 1850's. So I'm not sure the whole 'created workforce' argument has any merit.
Perhaps I'm wrong...
Artistic endeavors produced by a computer autonomous of any human input cannot meaningfully be called art.