Nearly 30 years ago, Barry Jones, a rather brilliant Aussie bloke (he won big on quiz game shows, then went into politics and became a Minister for Science) wrote Sleepres, Wake, a book in which he predicted that work in the future will be a privilege of the most capable, while the various plodders will have to live a life of involuntary leisure. The book is extremely well thought out and well worth a read.
But IMHO it (and the OP article) neglects to consider the following alternative: the unskilled will continue to work earning wages which allow a fairly comfortable existence, while being ever-decreasing relative to the wages of the skilled. This outcome seems more likely considering the basic human nature, and looks in fact like what is coming to pass: the modestly-well-off have cleaners, lawn-mowers, gardeners, nannies, guards etc, soon these may be supplemented by cooks, shoppers, drivers, etc. I do not see a limit as to how far such a chain of personal assistants can reach.
the modestly-well-off have cleaners, lawn-mowers, gardeners, nannies, guards etc, soon these may be supplemented by cooks, shoppers, drivers, etc. I do not see a limit as to how far such a chain of personal assistants can reach.
Having human servants may be a status thing, but consider just how good machines might get at doing literally everything on your list in say 50 years time. Sure obviously some niches will remain, perhaps for a very long time. But will these really be so labour intensive that they will be enough to eat up most of technological une...
The future when people will play WoW for a living.
The blogger comments this:
Jobs and status:
This actually is an amusing little scenario spiced with the familiar observation that charity isn't about helping people. Perhaps an example of how future dream time may be strange and interesting compared to our little portion of it, to which we are acclimatised.