Didn't people have a lot more free time back in the day? — darthbarracuda
require a more complex society, with everyone working more — darthbarracuda
does the population increase necessitate more advanced technology, or does the advancement of technology necessitate the increase of population? — darthbarracuda
I think this is a bit backward. The industrial revolution meant more jobs in new industries, which had higher wages for those working on the fields in the countryside. If factories are built and operate means that there have been enough people with the needed skills in the job market already. Population growth and demographic transitions take a long time.The industrial revolution required many new workers drawn from somewhere--hence an increase in the population. — Bitter Crank
Eliminating all labor through automation would be a colossal blunder on the part of capitalism. We are aware, are we not, that capitalists are perfectly capable of Colossal Blunders? They would destroy the model that creates their wealth and power--without another model in sight. They might fantasize a world of Alpha Plus people (Brave New World) without the plague of betas, deltas, and epsilons, but achieving it would be inordinately messy. — Bitter Crank
Does this scheme invalidate Marx's theory of labor value? *** — Bitter Crank
Will automation render workers superfluous or irrelevant? — Bitter Crank
Does this scheme invalidate Marx's theory of labor value? ***
***One of the cornerstones of Marxian economics was Karl Marx’s ideas around the labor theory of value. The labor theory of value argues that the value of a commodity is determined by the average amount of time needed to produce the commodity. An example of the labor theory of value would be if a t-shirt takes half the time to make as a hat, the hat would be priced at two times the t-shirt. — Bitter Crank
So your example is only true if society demanded the labor for both T-shirt making and hat making equally. — FlaccidDoor
Didn't people have a lot more free time back in the day? It seems like to me that the machines that we use in agriculture (etc) require a more complex society, with everyone working more. Or perhaps rather, just more people. Instead of most everyone working the fields, there is a minority of farmers who use equipment, which is manufactured in a factory the employs many people, which gets materials from other factories, etc. — darthbarracuda
New software is needed, periodically. The powerful computers are able to write new software as needed.
If computers became self-programming, why would they have any reason to write programs that benefitted humans? — Wayfarer
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