• Astorre
    397
    Ever-evolving technology opens up new questions for modern humans. Robots, increasingly successfully replacing humans in areas where they were once needed, are more efficient, willing to work as long as their batteries last, and, most importantly, don't question employers' respect for their rights.

    It's not as if this problem suddenly arose today. Factories where labor was replaced by machines didn't emerge today. But humans have always been needed. There have always been jobs that machines couldn't handle. The world found some balance between manual and machine labor back then.

    Today's new wave of "technologization" of production, the partial replacement of intellectual labor by AI, and the automation of processes, is once again pushing humans even further into the background.

    I see several hypothetical problems here, which I may be exaggerating, but I can't help but ask you, dear forum members, what you think about this.

    1. Humans remain needed as consumers, but not as producers. Given that the population of our planet is much higher today than in previous times, the problem is intensifying. So, how should people earn their living? Perhaps they can fill a niche in services? But even this is not infinite and will eventually be automated over time.

    2. Since humanity today is more educated than in previous times, the demands on work are high. Will the world be able to provide such a large number of jobs?

    3. How will a market economy cope with this challenge? After all, if we simply start handing out money to people simply for living, inflation will instantly reduce this money to nothing. Prices will simply rise. For example, if tomorrow everyone had one million dollars, then a loaf of bread would cost a million dollars.

    4. Human rights. People have always been a necessary balancer for the state or employer. In cases of excesses or abuses, people rebelled. But they were heard because the state and employers needed them. Now, with the diminishing need for humans for production or defense, the human voice risks becoming less audible.

    5. Education. It's already clear that the classic school and university format of education doesn't meet modern needs. First, it's too long, second, too traditional, and third, it produces far more specialists than is needed. A large supply of specialists, combined with their rapid replacement by robots and AI, lowers the cost of their labor.

    6. And finally, humans themselves. What should they do? What should they do? Even in everyday life, machines already do our laundry, robot vacuums, and so on. And tomorrow, will a specially trained robot entertain and educate our children? Provide attention to our wives? What will remain for us?

    I'm not claiming that all this is necessarily true, but questions arise. For now, reality itself doesn't pose them, but who can guarantee that it won't tomorrow?
  • Pierre-Normand
    2.9k
    I think most of the worries you express are are real and well-motivated. Even if some of the scenarios you sketch turn out to be exaggerated, it's reasonable to examine them now rather than after the fact.

    One thing that strikes me in your post, though, is a kind of slide from a salient technological "event" (e.g. a new wave of automation, AI replacing tasks, etc.) to very large social outcomes (e.g. mass unemployment, loss of bargaining power, markets breaking down, etc.) as if the event itself were doing most of the causal work. But in many cases what does the heavy lifting isn't the technology as such but rather the surrounding structure: who owns the productive capital, how bargaining power is distributed, what the welfare state looks like, how competition works, what education and retraining institutions do, and what fiscal/monetary policies are in place. The same technical capability can produce very different social outcomes under different institutional arrangements.

    Your "if tomorrow everyone gets $1M, bread costs $1M" example could be instructive. As a thought experiment, it shows that nominal money isn't the same thing as real resources. But it's also an "extreme event-style" scenario: overnight, universal, unconditioned, with no or little matching change in the background neo-liberal free-market structures. Real policy proposals that aim to keep people solvent in an automated economy don’t have to look like that. Inflation depends on system-level constraints: whether the transfer is financed by taxes vs new money, whether the economy has slack or is supply-constrained, whether production can expand, whether rents/monopoly pricing dominate, etc. So "handing out money" isn’t automatically self-defeating (and often isn't in social democracies) It’s a collective design question about how purchasing power is distributed relative to real productive capacity.
  • Athena
    3.7k
    Your "if tomorrow everyone gets $1M, bread costs $1M" example could be instructive. As a thought experiment, it shows that nominal money isn't the same thing as real resources. But it's also an "extreme event-style" scenario: overnight, universal, unconditioned, with no or little matching change in the background neo-liberal free-market structures. Real policy proposals that aim to keep people solvent in an automated economy don’t have to look like that. Inflation depends on system-level constraints: whether the transfer is financed by taxes vs new money, whether the economy has slack or is supply-constrained, whether production can expand, whether rents/monopoly pricing dominate, etc. So "handing out money" isn’t automatically self-defeating (and often isn't in social democracies) It’s a collective design question about how purchasing power is distributed relative to real productive capacity.Pierre-Normand

    Good morning, both of you- With Trump as president, we might have a real-life experiment of what happens when everyone is given a million dollars. I think mathematicians could use math to predict much of what happens. I was not that worried about every Greenlander getting a million dollars until reading Pierre-Normand's explanation, and now I am even more opposed to Trump's desire to buy Greenland. Unfortunately, Denmark made some very bad decisions regarding birth control and the education of Greenland's children. The relationship between Greenland and Denmark is damaged, and having a million dollars seems wonderful, but an even worse decision could come out of this.

    For sure, we need a better understanding of economics. We can look at Alaska, which pays everyone who lives in Alaska.... This is too important to ignore, and we need better information than I can provide without the help of AI.

    Yes, Alaska pays its citizens an annual Permanent Fund Dividend (PFD) from oil revenue, not a "royalist tax," but a share of state mineral royalties, providing yearly checks to eligible residents (including children) ranging from a few hundred to over $2,000, funded by oil extraction, and used as a model for Universal Basic Income.
    .

    Also, when I lived in a small coastal town, many women earned much-needed money in a shrimp factory where we removed the shrimp shells by hand. A man came to town with a shrimp-picking machine and all the women lost their seasonal income. The man who owned the machine made so much money that every year he invested in a new business to reduce the taxes he had to pay. This one man was getting richer and richer, while the women lost their much-needed money.

    That is how capitalism works, but I was one of those women so, coming from the worker's point of view, what if we all got to buy the machine, and we shared the work and the profit? I was of childbearing age, and sharing the work would mean working a lot less and still having money to raise a child. As a young mother, that looks pretty good. But it does not build the capital to create new businesses. But then again, our income would go back into the community.

    I want to add something very important. We not only have capitalism, but we also have autocratic industry, and from my point of view, that is the devil, a terrible evil we need to get rid of. Autocratic capitalism is a hierarchy of power, and it can be dehumanizing and bad for families and the whole community. The solution is Deming's democratic model for industry. His model of industry enables everyone to keep learning and contribute to providing a better product or service.

    I could be wrong, but I think empowering us to own and manage our income could yield positive economic and social outcomes. If the US returned to education for democracy and we replaced the autocratic industrial model with a democratic model, we might have healthier communities. Now the machine that takes our jobs improves our lives and leaves us independent of government assistance.
  • BC
    14.2k
    if we simply start handing out money to people simply for living, inflation will instantly reduce this money to nothing.Astorre

    Is this true? Maybe not.

    We already do hand out billions of dollars to people, actually. Welfare payments, social security, retirement (especially from under funded plans), unemployment, and so on. Inflation does occur, but government remittances aren't the only factor.

    I don't know whether a guaranteed basic income for everyone would be highly inflationary or not; would it not depend on the size of these payments? Sure, a million bucks for everyone all at once would be intensely inflationary, but that's not likely to be the case. More likely is that the basic income would be closer to "not enough to live on, but a little too much to die" -- subsistence, in other words.

    At any rate, I agree with you: rendering the working class redundant -- 90%+ of the population -- would be a species-wide catastrophe.

    I've done tedious white collar work which I thought a computer really should be doing. On the other hand, it paid the rent. But the fact is that the working class has not seized control of the economy in order to protect itself.
  • Athena
    3.7k
    But the fact is that the working class has not seized control of the economy in order to protect itself.BC

    I think the working class seizing control of the economy would be like trying to pick up mercury with tweezers. :lol: To get control of mercury requires a different tool. To increase working-class control is a matter of organization. We need to replace the autocratic industrial order with a democratic order and return to education for democracy.

    Sure, a million bucks for everyone all at once would be intensely inflationary, but that's not likely to be the case.BC

    If Trump has his way with Greenland, we will find out what giving everyone a million dollars does to the economy.
  • BC
    14.2k
    Hands off Greenland. And Canada, too.
  • Ecurb
    101
    Hands off Greenland. And Canada, too.BC

    I think we should invade Vancouver Island. The 70 or 80 miles that are south of the 49th parallel are rightfully ours. We'll give up that section of Minnesota that sticks up north of 49 by Lake of the Woods. Fair trade?
  • Philosophim
    3.5k
    May I present a different alternative based on history?

    Nixon in 1956 thought that we would go to a four day work week based on increased production.

    Throughout history, any time a new technology has come about that made things more efficient, people have worried there won't be enough jobs. The reality is that you cannot see the needs of tomorrow once those new efficiencies are in place.

    People will always fine more to do with what they have. 20 years ago the idea of having 16GB of RAM on your computer was insane. Whatever would we need that for? Turns out when you have greater time and efficiency in one area, people find new things to fill out that saved time and create new complexities that need people to work through.

    Now, what IS important is making sure regular workers aren't left behind and exploited. Because that's historical. Unchecked there will always be people in power who will rape a person happily and tell them to be grateful for it. We'll need to see how people abuse AI. For example, if an artist creates individual work, if AI scans it it should be paid to the artist. AI should have careful logs of data that it pulls from, even though it might slow AI down. But if artists are properly paid for AI use, it could be they also profit from AI.

    I think we're also going to face real limits on energy and infrastructure vs demand. This will likely cause new wars over resources like we do with oil. We'll still need people to fight those wars too. :)
  • BC
    14.2k
    We Minnesotans are fond of our map's shape so we would regret losing Lake of the Woods. In the bigger picture, though, the southern 70 miles of Vancouver are undoubtedly worth a lot more than Lake of the Woods, which is just one more lake among many. It would be a good deal for the US. Vancouverians probably like the shape of their map too, so they'd be unhappy. In the end, it doesn't matter, since when we take over Canada, all of Vancouver will be ours, and maybe Minnesota and Manitoba will be merged. We'll lose our little chimney up there.
  • Janus
    17.9k
    3. How will a market economy cope with this challenge? After all, if we simply start handing out money to people simply for living, inflation will instantly reduce this money to nothing. Prices will simply rise. For example, if tomorrow everyone had one million dollars, then a loaf of bread would cost a million dollars.Astorre

    Inflation will only result if there is insufficient product to meet demand.
  • Ecurb
    101
    In the end, it doesn't matter, since when we take over Canada, all of Vancouver will be ours, and maybe Minnesota and Manitoba will be merged. We'll lose our little chimney up there.BC

    Maybe by that time the independent nation of Cascadia will emerge, comprising Oregon (my home state) Washington and British Columbia. We will not let California join, beg as they may.
  • BC
    14.2k
    Right, the 9 Nations of North America -- one of which is Cascadia.

    Another nation is the morally upright Yankeedom, which extends in a gerrymandered state from New England to Minnesota, leaving out large parts of PA, NY, OH, MI, IN, IL, WI, and MN. It isn't that the areas not included in Yankeedom are shameless immoral shit holes, or something; they just have different affinities.

    But to be fair, there are pockets of shameless immoral shit holes which are close to, but aren't appropriate for Yankeedom--like southern Ohio, Illinois and Indiana. In the same way that Idaho, Wyoming, and Eastern Oregon / Washington have more in common than Seattle, Portland, and Vancouver have. Yeah, you don't need Los Angeles.
  • Astorre
    397


    Frankly, I didn't plan for the discussion to go this way. However, based on previous events, my prediction regarding the Greenland insinuations is that the US will benefit in the short term. Whether they'll legally take Greenland is questionable. They will most likely simply take over (virtually) everything that can be considered an economic and military asset in Greenland, including the Arctic. The downside could be a erosion of trust among its allies in the long term. But in that case, the US will once again rewrite the rules of the game to suit its own needs.



    In my opinion, this is a classic view, but it doesn't fully take into account all economic factors. For example, the explosive growth of the US stock market and the rise in stock indices, as well as real estate, over the past five years wasn't due to a sudden shortage of stocks or real estate. It's simply that a huge amount of dollars were printed, and the excess ended up there.



    In my heart, I agree with you. The concerns I've raised in this thread are more of an attempt to break away, and an answer to the question "what if..." As I've noted, humanity has dealt with this many times before.

    But there are nuance here. This time, things are a little different. Humans have never had a rival in their ability to think or evaluate anything. Now that's gradually changing. I'm not saying that AI in its current form is capable of creativity or transcendence, but within the limits of what's known to science, they navigate just as well as humans. For example, you'll agree that it's always been enough for humans to simply acquire good knowledge and simply use it, without inventing anything. This, at a minimum, provided sustenance.

    Today, that's changing. Good knowledge in a narrow field is simply not such a valuable asset anymore. Contemporary people are required to be creative and constantly seek new solutions. This is the value of a modern specialist (of course, I don't rule out the possibility that simple knowledge still works).
  • Zebeden
    19
    1. Humans remain needed as consumers, but not as producers. Given that the population of our planet is much higher today than in previous times, the problem is intensifying. So, how should people earn their living? Perhaps they can fill a niche in services? But even this is not infinite and will eventually be automated over time.Astorre

    As entertainers for the rich and for one another. Technology allows some people to have more than enough bread. So add games on top of that!
  • BC
    14.2k
    We need to replace the autocratic industrial order with a democratic order and return to education for democracy.Athena

    That's why I support "industrial democracy" and socialism. I'm not optimistic about the working class (90% of the population) self-organizing in the near or intermediate future. Provided that we did self-organize, the new order would replace fake democracy and autocratic control with democratic ownership and management of the economy. Don't ask! Nobody has worked out the details of how that would work. I believe it can work, will work; but 300 years of the capitalist management since the Industrial Revolution hasn't paved the way. Ursula Le Guin proposed a radical anarchism in The Dispossessed (a great sci-fi novel).
  • BC
    14.2k
    One of the great fears that haunt me is that ecological disaster will overtake technological and economic predictions and render them irrelevant. A heating climate, rising oceans, erratic weather events, unorganized population displacement, food production crises, and so on. It isn't that I expect the human species to be wiped out, but the carrying capacity of the planet could fall enough that all social, economic, cultural, military, political bets are off.

    I'll be 80 this year; I won't be around to find out what happens by 2050, or 2100, but billions of other people will be.

    Investors, capitalists, techno-optimists have a lot of faith that new technology will solve the problems of global warming, and produce an economic boom too. I'm not confident at all that there is any sort of technological fix in the offing.

    And finally, humans themselves. What should they do? What should they do? Even in everyday life, machines already do our laundry, robot vacuums, and so on.Astorre

    I am grateful that I don't have to do my laundry by hand, beating it on rocks in the river.

    Were I 18 instead of 80 this year, I am not sure what it is that I should/would/could expect for my future. I don't know what I would recommend to an 18 year old who wanted to find the best way forward for himself.

    I'm not sure what I would advise my species to do, either. There may be ways to roll back global warming, but the fixes might be as intolerable as the problems. We should immediate cut consumption of resources in food production, clothing, housing, transportation, and so on. Mass transit instead of individual vehicles; apartments over individual houses; far less clothing production (both natural and petroleum based fibers); much less meat production; produce far less plastic; leave the oil in the ground, along with coal; refrain from introducing technologies which render large numbers of workers irrelevant--and so on.

    I don't see any of this happening voluntarily. We'll stop producing steak when there isn't enough corn and wheat to feed us, just for example.
  • Astorre
    397
    I am grateful that I don't have to do my laundry by hand, beating it on rocks in the river.BC

    Humor is an effective way to overcome depression in today's world.

    But what's really going on? Man and humanity are too indebted to reality. Aren't they? We've brought ourselves to the brink of crisis. Your generation, or those before you, laid this foundation of mirth and uncertainty. But if someone has the right to declare that, starting tomorrow, they'll rethink the rules of the world order if they're not given favorable trade terms, then that's a sure sign we're close to that threshold.

    Reality, with its unpredictable power, will surely ask us all, "Have you behaved well?"

    So, even though I'm middle-aged, I hope that prosperity will last me a lifetime, and that I won't have to witness another great migration due to climate change. It's a comfortable position. However, I feel a responsibility (and I can't explain its nature) to the future, at least that of my children.

    In times of crisis, humanity remembers wisdom and philosophy. But what should we do if true sages are so constituted that they know nothing?


    And by the way, it's funny, but I myself chose to live almost in the very center of Eurasia (in case of a global flood of the seas, I'll at least already be here) :lol:
  • Janus
    17.9k
    In my opinion, this is a classic view, but it doesn't fully take into account all economic factors. For example, the explosive growth of the US stock market and the rise in stock indices, as well as real estate, over the past five years wasn't due to a sudden shortage of stocks or real estate. It's simply that a huge amount of dollars were printed, and the excess ended up there.Astorre

    You've changed the subject. You were talking about printing money to give to those who had lost jobs due to technology so they could remain as consumers buying, presumably, consumer items including food clothes, cleaning products and less essential items. I thought you were claiming this would cause inflation―"if you give everyone a million dollars then a loaf of bread will cost a million dollars"―and I pointed out that this would be the case only if products (the loaf of bread in this example) were scarce.
  • Astorre
    397


    I wasn't changing the topic, but simply trying to broaden the perspective to take into account the broader context of economic processes. Your argument that inflation only occurs when there's a shortage of output is certainly true in classical economic theory—it's the basis of supply and demand. However, in reality, especially under modern monetary policy, things aren't so linear. When central banks print money in huge quantities, these funds aren't always distributed evenly throughout the economy. They often end up in financial assets, real estate, or speculative markets, causing inflation—rising prices of stocks, houses, etc.—even if the production of consumer goods (like that loaf of bread) remains in surplus.

    In the context of my original idea about handing out money to support consumers in the age of automation, I wasn't referring to a sudden "million for everyone" (which is, of course, a hyperbole for illustration purposes), but to a systemic basic income. If such income is financed by new money without a corresponding increase in real productivity (or if production is concentrated in the hands of a few), then inflation may manifest itself not immediately in everyday goods, but more broadly: through rising inequality, the devaluation of labor, and, ultimately, pressure on prices. After all, if people receive money "just for living," then excess liquidity may lead to speculation rather than to investment in the real sector. Moreover, compare prices in countries with different income levels. We see that prices are significantly higher where income is higher. For example, food.

    And here's another thing to illustrate this dynamic: let's take a small town. Let's say, for example, that bread is produced by drones or fully automated systems. Then investing in such machines, owning real estate for production, or developing a business will only be profitable if this creates better conditions than simply receiving free money from the state. Otherwise, you can do nothing—the benefits will come anyway. This means that bread (or any other commodity) will be quite expensive relative to the "free allowance" because entrepreneurs or capital owners will demand high margins to motivate themselves to take risks and make efforts. Ultimately, the basic income may only cover the bare minimum, while real prices will rise, eroding purchasing power. This isn't pure inflation due to shortages, but rather a market distortion due to a lack of incentives for production and competition.

    Do you agree that in such a scenario, inflation becomes not only a question of shortages but also an imbalance between the money supply, resource distribution, and the incentives of economic agents? This, in my view, is the key challenge for a market economy in the future, where technology is increasing the concentration of wealth.
  • Astorre
    397


    It's even funny to imagine such a world: In the morning, you work at a hair salon, come home and watch poker on TV, in the evening you go to a hockey match, and after all that, you compete for money by throwing tennis balls into cups.

    I agree. Our modern economy embraces and easily tolerates gaming. Meanwhile, players have multimillion-dollar contracts, and it works. This generates interest and demand.
  • L'éléphant
    1.7k
    1. Humans remain needed as consumers, but not as producers. Given that the population of our planet is much higher today than in previous times, the problem is intensifying. So, how should people earn their living? Perhaps they can fill a niche in services? But even this is not infinite and will eventually be automated over time.Astorre
    It's been suggested that one solution is to provide a combination of government services and universal basic income for those that have been displaced by AI. Many workers just cannot retrain or transition fast enough to other field of work either due to age or abilities or economic reasons.
    In the past displacement wasn't because there's a faster machine/AI that can do the jobs, it's because supply and demand drove the changes.
    Retraining was also offered for free as a parallel transition to other jobs.
    Today, it's a different fight.

    3. How will a market economy cope with this challenge? After all, if we simply start handing out money to people simply for living, inflation will instantly reduce this money to nothing. Prices will simply rise. For example, if tomorrow everyone had one million dollars, then a loaf of bread would cost a million dollars.Astorre

    Would it?
    Are you saying that competition for business would also disappear?
    You just don't hand out money -- like during Covid. Yes, that's a good example of just handing out money. Let's use that as a lesson.
  • Astorre
    397
    Would it?
    Are you saying that competition for business would also disappear?
    You just don't hand out money -- like during Covid. Yes, that's a good example of just handing out money. Let's use that as a lesson.
    L'éléphant

    Yes, I just discussed this in my previous answer:

    And here's another thing to illustrate this dynamic: let's take a small town. Let's say, for example, that bread is produced by drones or fully automated systems. Then investing in such machines, owning real estate for production, or developing a business will only be profitable if this creates better conditions than simply receiving free money from the state. Otherwise, you can do nothing—the benefits will come anyway. This means that bread (or any other commodity) will be quite expensive relative to the "free allowance" because entrepreneurs or capital owners will demand high margins to motivate themselves to take risks and make efforts. Ultimately, the basic income may only cover the bare minimum, while real prices will rise, eroding purchasing power. This isn't pure inflation due to shortages, but rather a market distortion due to a lack of incentives for production and competition.Astorre
  • Athena
    3.7k
    That's why I support "industrial democracy" and socialism. I'm not optimistic about the working class (90% of the population) self-organizing in the near or intermediate future. Provided that we did self-organize, the new order would replace fake democracy and autocratic control with democratic ownership and management of the economy. Don't ask! Nobody has worked out the details of how that would work. I believe it can work, will work; but 300 years of the capitalist management since the Industrial Revolution hasn't paved the way. Ursula Le Guin proposed a radical anarchism in The Dispossessed (a great sci-fi novel).BC

    A Democratic Model for industry has been used since the end of the Second World War. Deming tried to get the US Industry to adopt Deming's 14 points of quality management, and the US rejected it; however, Japan's Industry had been destroyed in the war, and when the US was Americanizing Japan, Deming was able to convince them to adopt his model. From there, Japan kicked our butts in competition for world markets.

    I had the wonderful opportunity to have training for supervisors using the Deming model. Besides being excellent for Industry, it is also excellent for families because workers learn how to be nicer people, and an autocratic Industry is very mean and harmful.

    I think it is important to keep threads on track with the OP, so to get closer to the subject... Today, we can go online and find the information we want, and we can find people who share our interests and concerns, and this was not possible in the past. Workers can use this technology to organize and form unions intended to give them power.

    Information is power, and we can get it and share it. Today is nothing like the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, and hopefully more people are giving up religion for science and do so to have a better future. You know, the New Age. A time of high tech, peace, and the end of tranny.
  • BC
    14.2k
    Sticking with the OP topic of Technology and the future of Humanity...

    Marx thought that the working class would acquire and use the technology of the capitalist class (owners and high level management) for their own benefit against the ruling class. The bourgeoisie would sell the rope with which the working class would hang them." They sold the "rope" but there haven't been many "hangings".

    We (workers, 90% of the population) have acquired and adopted the technology, sure enough, but have mostly used it for personal goals -- entertainment, the home budget, sexual stimulation (porn), and so on--all good uses. True, resistance activities (such as organizing against ICE) do use tech resources effectively. But resistance activities are at this point a political niche activity.

    Workers can use this technology to organize and form unions intended to give them power.Athena

    And capitalists can use this technology to subvert, prevent, and destroy worker organizations and unions, and they have -- quite effectively. It isn't just tech, though. Capitalists have been given effective legal tools to suppress workers.

    Manipulation of public opinion doesn't depend on the latest AI. Joseph Goebbels did a fine job of it 90 years ago using old fashioned print, radio, and film. Because access to the traditional tools of communication [radio, television, film, print] are very asymmetric; and access to new communication tools [internet, chat apps, and so on] are democratically accessible, they are also highly dispersed. It's difficult to locate one's desired audience. Well funded users can swamp the population with a particular bias.

    How AI is going to figure into this discussion is a bit unclear, to me anyway.
  • Questioner
    422
    Education. It's already clear that the classic school and university format of education doesn't meet modern needs. First, it's too long, second, too traditional, and third, it produces far more specialists than is needed. A large supply of specialists, combined with their rapid replacement by robots and AI, lowers the cost of their labor.Astorre

    As a retired teacher, I'm going to speak to this point. I think we learned with the Covid homeschooling that a computer cannot replace a living, breathing teacher. The face-to-face connection between students and teachers is fundamental to effective learning.

    What sources do you cite that the modern educational system does not meet current needs?

    Another point I want to make is that computers/AI cannot ever supplant the artists in our society - the painters, the sculptors, and the writers.
  • Athena
    3.7k
    Education. It's already clear that the classic school and university format of education doesn't meet modern needs. First, it's too long, second, too traditional, and third, it produces far more specialists than is needed. A large supply of specialists, combined with their rapid replacement by robots and AI, lowers the cost of their labor.Astorre

    As a retired teacher, I'm going to speak to this point. I think we learned with the Covid homeschooling that a computer cannot replace a living, breathing teacher. The face-to-face connection between students and teachers is fundamental to effective learning.

    What sources do you cite that the modern educational system does not meet current needs?

    Another point I want to make is that computers/AI cannot ever supplant the artists in our society - the painters, the sculptors, and the writers.
    Questioner

    What a thing for me to wake up to. :grin: Education is not too long, but it is a lifelong pursuit of happiness that makes our lives rich, even if we don't have money. Really, back in ancient days, Socrates was a working-class man, not a rich one, but he was welcomed at their gatherings for drinking, dining, and arguing about what the best reasoning is. You all have to know this is not my thinking. It is the thinking of Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, and the Enlightenment that followed the Renaissance. This ancient thinking was the foundation of our democracy. Only when we are literate in the Greek and Roman classics are we prepared to defend democracy.

    The Greek pursuit of happiness centers on Eudaimonia, a concept beyond fleeting pleasure, meaning "flourishing," "living well," or "a life well-lived" through virtue, reason, and fulfilling one's potential, as taught by Aristotle, who saw it as the highest good achieved by acting excellently

    Please reread that quote and ask whether that's what education has always been about, or has education radically changed since 1958? Our past education was education for everyone. Our past education focused on becoming good citizens and developing good moral judgment. Our past education made us generalists, not specialists. We replaced that past education model with education for technology, and now we face a cultural crisis that may destroy democracy in the US. Since 1958, all those who are not going to college have been cheated out of the education that would benefit them, not the military-industrial complex.

    Some retired teachers know what I am talking about when I hold up a sign for a return to liberal education. Teachers who do not know that history of education become defensive and think I am attacking them. :groan: My grandmother was a teacher, and she had the authority in her classroom, not the government wanting paperwork. After the National Defense Education Act, when her disciplinary methods were interfered with, she found a different school where her authority in the classroom was respected. It hurts me a lot when teachers think I am attacking them instead of them understanding I am fighting for them. Not many teachers would choose to prepare the young for the military-industrial complex and being at the bottom of a chain of authority.

    Not only are teachers at the bottom of a chain of authority, but office managers have approached my doctors and dentists while I am receiving care. They have scalded my doctor or dentist for taking too long with my appointment, as though a doctor or nurse is no more respected than an assembly line worker.

    If we want a better future, we must have a liberal education. We must get the Miliray Industrial Complex out of our lives! That is not the organization for democracy. We can use this technology for a better future. But we need to agree on a few things and work together because AI can replace us, and all our social, economic, and political decisions depend on the education we choose to have.
  • Questioner
    422
    My grandmother was a teacher, and she had the authority in her classroom, not the government wanting paperwork.Athena

    A couple of years in to my teaching career, I learned the secret to never having discipline problems. Treat the students respectfully, as if they were people. And always, in every situation, see it from their side. Always try to understand where they are coming from.
  • magritte
    588
    How AI is going to figure into this discussion is a bit unclear, to me anyway.BC

    This challenging discussion gave me impetus to check the progress of AI on whatever to me available documentaries. They are now talking AGI, self-teaching General Intelligence machines that are dropped into deep environments without support. At first they nearly drown but eventually learn to far outshine even the best professionals.

    Their accomplishments are frighteningly effective, especially when they surpass even the remotest possibilities of human creativity, something we used to hold untouchably sacred by any future bots. A fairly recent example was the solving of the very complex 3D protein folding problem by AlphaFold. The best biochem researchers have been making slow creatively initiated progress for decades to predict proteins that have 100.000 to millions of atoms that bind themselves into complex shapes. The self-taught AGI running powerful hardware solved all the possible configurations.

    Obviously, wealthy entrepreneurs corporations and governments will have future access to such technology and will also control the direction of future developments. For good or ill. Consequently, the rich will get richer at an ever increasing rate and all of us bourgeois (that's pretty much everyone any of us know) will become quickly distanced from our trillionaire masters.
  • Astorre
    397


    All these questions I posed at the beginning don't rely on any authoritative opinions. They are my own opinions and my own concerns, which may or may not be true.

    All six of these questions are closely interconnected and flow from one another.

    The first thing that prompted me to ask them was a phenomenological sense of the speed of modernity. I'm middle-aged, yet even I can sense how much the speed of life today differs from what it was even 20-25 years ago. And it's not just the speed of information exchange, but also the speed of information acquisition: yesterday the world was preoccupied with Israel, today it's Greenland. Everything happens instantly. At the micro level, my child can acquire knowledge in minutes (with the help of AI) of a depth that took me years to attain with classical education. Yes, of course, there's not the same level of immersion, but reality whispers, "Why is this necessary?" Of course, I'm ready to argue with this whisper, and today, my arguments still hold some weight (especially in medicine, where human lives depend on it).

    But I meet a lot of young people. For example, my subordinate, a university graduate with no theoretical depth (he was hired because there was an urgent need for a specialist), works brilliantly. He has answers to very complex questions (again, thanks to AI). When I approach his workstation, he has three monitors and a phone. He has over 50 browser tabs open at once. He receives constant notifications and messages. And without getting bogged down, he manages everything, and quite effectively, I can tell you.

    I look at him as if he were an alien. Although I'm only 37 years old, I don't feel old.

    It's not that I'm worried that human adaptability isn't sufficient to keep up with modern times. Humans always rise to challenges. But as noted above, in our history, there has never been a tool capable of generating coherent responses to a query. We haven't been beaten by hardware at chess before. We were needed as thinkers. Because we were needed, everyone tolerated our vices and shortcomings. But now?

    Yes, I apologize for the lack of rigor in my judgment, but this isn't a dissertation defense, just a forum.
  • Questioner
    422
    But as noted above, in our history, there has never been a tool capable of generating coherent responses to a query. We haven't been beaten by hardware at chess before. We were needed as thinkers. Because we were needed, everyone tolerated our vices and shortcomings. But now?Astorre

    This is a valid concern.

    Relying on generative-AI gives over core human activities to machines. The result is that those human skills atrophy. Generative-AI interferes not only with independence of thought, but competency – in the areas of imagination, thinking, reasoning, and making decisions.

    Instead of the human making decisions, the algorithms do.

    From an interesting article in the Atlantic –

    The Big AI Risk Not Enough People are Seeing: Beware technology that makes us less human

    Artificial intelligence could significantly diminish humanity, even if machines never ascend to superintelligence, by sapping the ability of human beings to do human things…

    We’re seeing a general trend of selling AI as ‘empowering,’ a way to extend your ability to do something, whether that’s writing, making investments, or dating … But what really happens is that we become so reliant on algorithmic decisions that we lose oversight over our own thought processes and even social relationships…

    What makes many applications of artificial intelligence so disturbing is that they don’t expand our mind’s capacity to think, but outsource it…
  • Athena
    3.7k
    AI has changed the power structure worldwide, and our politics have not kept up with our reality. According to Alvin Toffler, the author of Future Shock. In his next book, Power Shift, he says...

    Twenty years ago IBM had only the feeblest competition and the United States probably had more computers than the rest of the world combined. Today computer power has spread rapidly around the world, the U.S. share has sagged, and IBM faces stiff competition from companies like NEC. Hitachi and Fujitsu in Japan; Groupe Bull in France; ICL in Britain, and many others. Industry analysts speculate about the post-IBM era.

    Shock waves have swept through the media industries, and our medical system has been completely reorganized. Alvin Toffler wrote of this in 1990, so my information is embarrassingly outdated. To refuse to use AI in the fantasy that we can control it by our personal decisions, it is like thinking we can ignore global warming and continue to make our economy strong by burning fossil fuels. Globally, computers are talking with each other, and I don't think they care about what we think.

    Here is an update https://www.google.com/search?q=post+IBM&rlz=1C1GCEA_enUS990US990&oq=post+IBM&gs_lcrp=EgZjaHJvbWUyBggAEEUYOTIICAEQABgWGB4yCAgCEAAYFhgeMggIAxAAGBYYHjIICAQQABgWGB4yCAgFEAAYFhgeMggIBhAAGBYYHjIICAcQABgWGB4yCAgIEAAYFhgeMggICRAAGBYYHtIBCTYwMzNqMGoxNagCCLACAfEFMvAe4ga2OdY&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8 It might as well be written in Greek because I don't understand anything it says. Makes me want to garden and forget the rest of the world. There is no way I can keep up, and compared to the people I know, I am the most informed. :scream:
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