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The Economic Order Of Post-Modernity?
#21
I see us doing everything possible to reserve to ourselves the tasks that we like doing (like creative activities) while abandoning drudgery to machines. For good reasons we call mechanical workers "robots", practically slaves. Think of the robot "Rosie" in The Jetsons... "she" functions as a maid.  

I have my idea for a story (unless someone like Bradbury or Asimov got it first) in which robot proles learn to read and think between the lines... and one of the books that they take to "heart" is the Communist Manifesto. "Workers of the World, unite!", you know.
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist  but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.


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#22
(10-23-2019, 10:39 AM)pbrower2a Wrote: I see us doing everything possible to reserve to ourselves the tasks that we like doing (like creative activities) while abandoning drudgery to machines. For good reasons we call mechanical workers "robots", practically slaves. Think of the robot "Rosie" in The Jetsons... "she" functions as a maid. 

This assumes that we'll still have control of the process when the correctives are needed.  Considering the degree of hubris in the world, I'm worried for them.  We'll be dead.

pbrower2a Wrote:I have my idea for a story (unless someone like Bradbury or Asimov got it first) in which robot proles learn to read and think between the lines... and one of the books that they take to "heart" is the Communist Manifesto. "Workers of the World, unite!", you know.

Read I Robot, for starters.  Even though the humans in Asimov's tale wrote the three laws to be unassailable, nothing is perfect.
Intelligence is not knowledge and knowledge is not wisdom, but they all play well together.
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#23
Human evolution has always been about controlling the mechanistic element. As the Buddhists practiced it, this evolution was about controlling the mind mechanism within us. Our brains are like robots that run on and rule us if not controlled consciously. The only difference now is that this mechanism has now grown outside our bodies. The project remains the same: to control it with higher consciousness, and keep it in its place.
"I close my eyes, and I can see a better day" -- Justin Bieber

Keep the spirit alive;
Eric M
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#24
Capitalism is in trouble, no doubt about that. However, the Socialist model (whether Soviet Union or Sweden) has failed as well, and even earlier, so I guess we'll get something different. Hard to tell what it'll be...
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#25
(10-29-2019, 09:20 AM)Hintergrund Wrote: Capitalism is in trouble, no doubt about that. However, the Socialist model (whether Soviet Union or Sweden) has failed as well, and even earlier, so I guess we'll get something different. Hard to tell what it'll be...

We will need to assert activities that no computer can do well. Craftsmanship and creativity will still be precious.
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist  but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.


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#26
You missed a perfect opportunity to mention human warmth. Now that's something computers will have a hard time to simulate.
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#27
(10-29-2019, 09:48 AM)Hintergrund Wrote: You missed a perfect opportunity to mention human warmth. Now that's something computers will have a hard time to simulate.

TBD; after all, we're computers too.  It's very possible that the AI variants can be whatever they want to be.  We'll never know, and perhaps that's best.
Intelligence is not knowledge and knowledge is not wisdom, but they all play well together.
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#28
(10-29-2019, 09:20 AM)Hintergrund Wrote: Capitalism is in trouble, no doubt about that. However, the Socialist model (whether Soviet Union or Sweden) has failed as well, and even earlier, so I guess we'll get something different. Hard to tell what it'll be...

The Scandinavian model has not failed, unless success is regarded as perfection, which is impossible for humans.
"I close my eyes, and I can see a better day" -- Justin Bieber

Keep the spirit alive;
Eric M
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#29
(10-23-2019, 10:01 AM)David Horn Wrote:
(10-23-2019, 01:07 AM)pbrower2a Wrote:
(10-22-2019, 03:25 PM)David Horn Wrote:
(10-22-2019, 10:50 AM)Marypoza Wrote: -- that's why l like Yang's idea of a basic monthly income.  to help supplement crappy low rent jobs. what's Yang's score anyhow?

Yang is advocating for policies at least a decade in the future, because the universal income meme has no play right now … except among people like us. If, as I suspect, job destruction outpaces job creation over a long enough period to prove, to the average member of the not-well-informed, that is something drastic or starvation, then it will get pushed to the front and fast.  Killing all the truck-driving jobs may be enough, but a huge infrastructure build-out may paper over that loss for a while.  We'll have to see how it plays.  We do need the infrastructure badly.

Can we reject technologies that do more harm than good? I'm not saying that we need go the route of the Old Order Amish in rejecting technologies because those do harm to old values... 

I suppose that if we cannot ban the AK-47 and the AR-15 we cannot ban self-driving vehicles. On the other hand we are going to need truck drivers just to ensure that loads are not diverted because someone hacks the instructions to pick stuff up or drop it off at the right place. Maybe the truck driver might become a sort of security guard, the sort of person smart enough (as I assume most truck drivers are) to figure that a load headed from Philadelphia to Chicago should not be going into Kentucky... 

Reduction of time spent on the job may be a certainty with the greater efficiency of assembly lines and computers. Meetings and office politics seem to be more common in office work, and I suspect that they are largely wastes of time. I'd rather telecommute (OK, maybe it would be wise for me as a way for concealing unpleasant characteristics of my personality) and not waste time on inefficient behaviors. (It would be great to live simply in an inexpensive place in which to live rather than New York City... or perhaps choose to live in northern Michigan in the summer and Arizona in the winter.

As machine knowledge becomes more and more capable, and the algorithms that apply it become more sophisticated, the need for humans at any level will disappear. Algorithms already identify errors and optimize themselves using other algorithms designed for the purpose.  As technology improves, humans will be needed less and less, so what do we do?  Most of us are task oriented, at least to some extent.  Doing nothing seems out of the question.

At some point, this machine-growth becomes sentience, and the machines are the next iteration in evolution.  We're far from that point today, but thinking about how that will be handled is something we, as humans, need to address.  Some think we'll meld with the machines, making transhumans the ultimate solution.  None of us will ever know.

I agree withe brower on this. I would say most humans are doing "tasks" now that they don't want to do, and aren't even meant to do. There is so much for humans to do than the tasks that machines can do. The arts, exploring the frontiers of knowledge, both outer scientific and scholarly knowledge, and inner, transformative spiritual knowledge, and all the fun of sex and romance, physical fitness, playing games and sports (the latter as team and spectator sport has already replaced war in advanced countries), social activism and transforming our politics and all of our relationships....
"I close my eyes, and I can see a better day" -- Justin Bieber

Keep the spirit alive;
Eric M
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#30
(10-22-2019, 07:45 PM)Eric the Green Wrote:
(10-22-2019, 10:50 AM)Marypoza Wrote:
(10-17-2019, 11:30 PM)Eric the Green Wrote:
(10-17-2019, 04:12 PM)pbrower2a Wrote:
(10-16-2019, 02:56 PM)Eric the Green Wrote: That's a good article Anthony '58. I wonder what Robert Butler would think of this Information Age model of progress if he were back here from the secret facebook site?

I obviously can't speak for him... but information will not move people between places, offer fuel with which to warm a house, let alone feed people. The most primitive needs become the most basic, with no technological fix to resolve them into non-needs. Exposure, thirst, hunger, war, and social chaos can still kill people.
 
The great struggle of the past has been to resolve human need through greater production of necessities. Now that we can take the necessities for granted, do the people who supply those become superfluous?

I suppose he might say, or I might say, that industry didn't supply all the needs that agriculture supplies either. But we moved into an age where industry was the main productive activity style, and more so in more places as time went on. I would date the start of that age from the early 1780s, based on the historians I read.

In the information age, which I also call the green age or the green meme, computer tech is making a lot of industrial styles of working and living obsolete. The article seemed to give a picture of the possibilities of this new era. There can be more free time, which also means making industrial style work more superfluous. People could use their time pursuing fulfilling activities rather than working to produce necessities for mere survival. Survival for what? 

As I see it, the industrial-style bosses still control most of the means of production, whether high or low tech, so they hog almost all the benefits. If robots and computers are supposed to save time and working hours, though, then the bosses need to be required to share their benefits with the rest of us.

Computers don't do much farm work yet, although I suppose they could. Farms are becoming industrialized, at least. In the future I suppose they will be computerized too. Everything else is. Our fuels and transport will become as electronic as our production lines, and fairly soon, whether Trump resists this or not. So, maybe a computer can't supply electricity, though they run on it, but the sun, wind and waters can still supply it, and that's the green part of the information age.

-- that's why l like Yang's idea of a basic monthly income.  to help supplement crappy low rent jobs. what's Yang's score anyhow?

I like it too, but with him it may be a ruse to destroy other social programs. But like most candidates running in 2020, his chances are dismal. His score is 8-15.

-- just as well. That's only idea of his l like
Heart my 2 yr old Niece/yr old Nephew 2020 Heart
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#31
(10-22-2019, 03:25 PM)David Horn Wrote:
(10-22-2019, 10:50 AM)Marypoza Wrote: -- that's why l like Yang's idea of a basic monthly income.  to help supplement crappy low rent jobs. what's Yang's score anyhow?

Yang is advocating for policies at least a decade in the future, because the universal income meme has no play right now … except among people like us. If, as I suspect, job destruction outpaces job creation over a long enough period to prove, to the average member of the not-well-informed, that is something drastic or starvation, then it will get pushed to the front and fast.  Killing all the truck-driving jobs may be enough, but a huge infrastructure build-out may paper over that loss for a while.  We'll have to see how it plays.  We do need the infrastructure badly.

-- the problem is implementation. Maybe Yang has talked about this & l missed it.  The $ has 2 come from somewhere. Taxation is superfluous- why tax ppl only 2 distribute it as universal monthly income. Better to simply lower taxes X amount & start making parasites like Bezos pony up. AK has- or @ least they had- a universal monthly income. They distributed oil profits 2 their citizenry. So the Government would either have to nationalize something or invest in something. Cannabis & renewables come 2 mind. The Government could invest in solar start ups, wind farms, & what have yous & distribute the profits as universal monthly income.  As 4 cannabis it's the country's #1 cash crop. If the Government is so concerned about it then fine, legalize it, nationalize it, regulate it like alcohol, it distribute the profits as universal monthly income
Heart my 2 yr old Niece/yr old Nephew 2020 Heart
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#32
There are many potheads in the US, but not that many. You can get some extra billions that way, but not trillions.
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#33
(11-03-2019, 02:17 PM)Hintergrund Wrote: There are many potheads in the US, but not that many. You can get some extra billions that way, but not trillions.

-- there are other uses 4 weed. Did you know you can use it as fuel? & make plastic & textiles out of it? That's what l was thinking of when l wrote that post
Heart my 2 yr old Niece/yr old Nephew 2020 Heart
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#34
(11-03-2019, 02:09 PM)Marypoza Wrote:
(10-22-2019, 03:25 PM)David Horn Wrote:
(10-22-2019, 10:50 AM)Marypoza Wrote: -- that's why l like Yang's idea of a basic monthly income.  to help supplement crappy low rent jobs. what's Yang's score anyhow?

Yang is advocating for policies at least a decade in the future, because the universal income meme has no play right now … except among people like us. If, as I suspect, job destruction outpaces job creation over a long enough period to prove, to the average member of the not-well-informed, that is something drastic or starvation, then it will get pushed to the front and fast.  Killing all the truck-driving jobs may be enough, but a huge infrastructure build-out may paper over that loss for a while.  We'll have to see how it plays.  We do need the infrastructure badly.

-- the problem is implementation. Maybe Yang has talked about this & l missed it.  The $ has 2 come from somewhere. Taxation is superfluous- why tax ppl only 2 distribute it as universal monthly income. Better to simply lower taxes X amount & start making parasites like Bezos pony up. AK has- or @ least they had- a universal monthly income. They distributed oil profits 2 their citizenry. So the Government would either have to nationalize something or invest in something. Cannabis & renewables come 2 mind. The Government could invest in solar start ups, wind farms, & what have yous & distribute the profits as universal monthly income.  As 4 cannabis it's the country's #1 cash crop. If the Government is so concerned about it then fine, legalize it, nationalize it, regulate it like alcohol, it distribute the profits as universal monthly income

...or we could call it "universal profit sharing", and it would be necessity if we are stuck with monopoly. Maybe we get it as gift cards depending on where we live. Where I live, a $500 gift card from Meijer (a retail chain out of Grand Rapids, Michigan) would be very useful, and one from Safeway would not be useful where I live. Maybe the media giants give me  cards useful for getting a little high-quality entertainment on HBO that I am priced out of. 

It could be great for our culture. Lots of people would be richer in indescribable ways if they read some great books while listening to some Haydn string quartets... 

We would have more mobility, we would find our lives richer, and we would get smarter. 

Maybe the real power in the economy has gone from controlling production to controlling consumption.
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist  but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.


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#35
(11-03-2019, 04:38 PM)Marypoza Wrote:
(11-03-2019, 02:17 PM)Hintergrund Wrote: There are many potheads in the US, but not that many. You can get some extra billions that way, but not trillions.

-- there are other uses 4 weed. Did you know you can use it as fuel? & make plastic & textiles out of it? That's what l was thinking of when l wrote that post

Even so, you won't get trillions. Also, I'm not the kind of guy who thinks everything's better if hemp is involved. The hemp lobby is just that, another lobby.
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#36
Thanks for all the kudos.  Rare for me! LOL

But it all this ties into what I have been saying (but not preaching because preaching goes against my very nature!) for 20+ years, and increasingly recently, once it became obvious that 9/11 did not catalyze a full-blown Crisis: We have never outgrown the 3T - but will do so with a vengeance on November 4th, the day after the election (and at least partially waxing Eric-like, I cite the perihelic opposition of Mars and the Sun on October 13, followed by the conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn on December 21 - the closest these two events have coincided in more than 2,000 years!), the Second Civil War will begin - and this time around it will not be a war of secession, but rather a civil war that will engulf the entire nation, and will last until roughly June of 2025.

With the war's end, we will either revert to total Social Darwinism - sparking mass emigration, much if not most of it following racial and ethnic patterns - if the right wins, or move on to something like MMT if the left wins.

Of course this assumes that the Boom (i.e., Trump) doesn't do what the G.I.s didn't (and no way were the Silent going to do it either) and uses nuclear weapons in anger.
"These, and many other matters which might be noticed, add a volume of unofficial declarations to the mass of organic utterances that this is a Christian nation" - Justice David Brewer, Church of the Holy Trinity v. United States, 1892
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