> I would like to push forward this idea: we will develope to be an
> automaton-society. Mashinery will do a more and more growing part of
> everything that has to be done to create good and sustainable living
> conditions for everyone.
This seems to be the case - human work is getting redundant (even today
only, 10-15% need to work to supply everything, from machines to
government and prostitution.)
Customization of production may increase the demand but is not likely to
create jobs. That dream went away with "Internet will create jobs" meme
- it's still the machines doing the work.
When most of the population has no 'work' to offer for exchange for
machine-produced goods (food, water, medical assistance), several
outcomes come to mind, sorted by decreasing probability:
- Excess 99% of population is eliminated, the rest live in some kind of
pastoral libertarian clan-based paradise serviced by autonomous
machines. This is where things seem to be pushed to by the top 0.00001%
(brief nuclear war totally makes sense, they already have shelters and
sex slaves). They are waiting for the fully autonomous machines so they
can get rid of tech workers.
- Some yet unknown political force enforces model for societal
participation that is not work-based. On the optimistic side it's basic
income or similar, on the dark side it's jails & wildlife preserves.
What is troubling is that most brainpower today is wasted on doomed
attempts to create 'demand', so it's not clear where this option can
come from. As Zizek said, we can imagine everything except the end of
capitalism.
- We figure out how to colonize the outer space. Issues postponed for
few thousand years.
- Extraterrestrials enforce money-less Star Trek utopia.
Take a pick.
> come up, who owns them. We will have to develope a kind of mashinery
> that is suitable to be owned by the public.(e.g. the mashinery of
Somehow, "we" getting to own the means of production didn't quite work
in the last few hundred years. What is supposed to have changed?
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