It's not menial tasks though. Once the singularity happens, everything changes, there won't be anything that a robot can't do, and do it quicker and better than a human.
if that happens, then so what?
It's not menial tasks though. Once the singularity happens, everything changes, there won't be anything that a robot can't do, and do it quicker and better than a human.
I can see the transition involving complete economic collapse and a new world order arising from the ashes of our world to be honest.
It won't be pretty.
Maybe the workers buy their own robots, then hire them to the companies for a reduced salary while getting to sit at home and only have to worry about maintenance on the robot.
Maybe the workers buy their own robots, then hire them to the companies for a reduced salary while getting to sit at home and only have to worry about maintenance on the robot.
I can see the transition involving complete economic collapse and a new world order arising from the ashes of our world to be honest.
It won't be pretty.
I've never understood this logic seeing as it's an argument that is already several hundred years old and still hasn't come true yet.
It's not menial tasks though. Once the singularity happens, everything changes, there won't be anything that a robot can't do, and do it quicker and better than a human.
As noted above, the singularity
And there won't be anything that a robot won't be capable of doing when the singularity occurs.
Yes, people could own robots, but it will be the wealthy, not the ordinary person on the street. Automation will congregate wealth into the hands of the few at the expense of those who no longer can find work. The few that have the ability to creatively account their companies profits to more friendly jurisdictions.
Society won't be able to keep up with the change, when unemployment hits, 20, 30, 40% and there's riots on the streets and governments are paralysed by the inability to legislate. Sure once the dust settles maybe it will be all nice and rosy, but there will be an extremely painful transition to get there as the capitalist economy would need to be replaced.
I've heard plenty of people on these boards, in various topics, talk about how in a few years'/decades' time they'll be less jobs as we're replaced by computers/robots/automation.
I've never understood this logic seeing as it's an argument that is already several hundred years old and still hasn't come true yet. [..]
The difference is that we're now rapidly approaching the singularity, and there will be no job that can't be carried out by a machine.
I've heard plenty of people on these boards, in various topics, talk about how in a few years'/decades' time they'll be less jobs as we're replaced by computers/robots/automation.
The circumstances are different:
When automation took most of the jobs in agriculture, society changed and most jobs moved into manufacturing.
When automation took most of the jobs in manufacturing, society changed and most jobs moved into service.
Automation is starting to take most of the jobs in service and also increasingly wider ranges of jobs (e.g. driving could go soon)...where do the bulk of jobs come from next?
As Tyson said, you are projecting forward only think of the jobs of today and not considering new types of job and work will appear. It's not different any all, just the same argument based on thinking no new types of work can exist.