I can't help but tie these maunderings to the modern epithets of "snowflake" 
and "privilege" (shared by opposite but similar ideologues).  I have to wonder 
what it means to "learn" something.  The question of whether a robot will take 
one's job cuts nicely to the chase, I think.  How much of what any of us 
do/know is uniquely (or best) doable by a general intelligence (if such exists) 
versus specific intelligence?  While I'm slightly fluent in a handful of 
programming languages, I cannot (anymore) just sit down and write a program in 
any one of them.  I was pretty embarrassed at a recent interview where they 
asked me to code my solution to their interview question on the whiteboard.  
After I was done I noticed sugar from 3 different languages in the code I 
"wrote" ... all mixed together for convenience.  They said they didn't mind.  
But who knows?  Which is better?  Being able to coherently code in one 
language, with nearly compilable code off the bat?  Or the [dis]ability of 
changing languages on a regular basis in order to express a relatively portable 
algorithm?  Which one would be easier for a robot?  I honestly have no idea.

But the idea that the arbitrary persnickety sugar I learned yesterday *should* 
be useful today seems like a bit of a snowflake/privileged way to think (even 
ignoring the "problem of induction" we often talk about on this list).  Is what 
it means to "learn" something fundamentally different from one era to the next? 
 Do the practical elements of "learning" evolve over time?  Does it really ... 
really? ... help to know how a motor works in order to drive a car?  ... to 
reliably drive a car so that one's future is more predictable?  ... to reduce 
the total cost of ownership of one's car?  Or is there a logical layer of 
abstraction below which the Eloi really don't need to go?

On 3/5/19 11:04 AM, Steven A Smith wrote:
> Interesting to see the "new bar" set so low as age 30.  Reminds me of my
> own youth when the "Hippie generation" was saying "don't trust anyone
> over 30!".  Later I got to know a lot of folks from the "Beat"
> generation who were probably in their 30's by that time and rather put
> out that they couldn't keep their "hip" going amongst the new youth culture.
> 
> ...
> My mules are named Fortran/Prolog/APL/C/PERL and  VMS/BSD/Solaris/NeXT
> and IBM/CDC/CRAY/DEC and GL/OpenGL/VRPN/VRML.   I barely know the names
> of the new
> tractors/combines/cropdusters/satellite-imaging/laser-leveling/???
> technology.
> 
> Always to be counted on for nostalgic maunderings,

-- 
☣ uǝlƃ
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