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Brian Villanueva's avatar

The "business case for AI" is much simpler and older. The industrial revolution allowed capital to become physical labor. The digital revolution will allow capital to become intellectual labor.

The former upended the economies of Europe (and America) and depressed wages throughout the 19th century. It decoupled economic success from physical strength and skills. This was beneficial for capital but not so much for labor. (Luddites anyone?)

The latter will do the same, depressing wages for skilled mental labor (lawyers, analysis, programmers, etc...) in the 21st century. Between AI and robotics, the value of labor as an economic input is likely to fall to near-zero. The more interesting question to me is, who will the laptop-class Luddites be and what will they do?

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Harold Kildow's avatar

Once again I think of Frank Herbert’s Dune, the conceit of which is a distant post AI future where humans are again controlling their thinking. But that results in a homocidal religion sweeping the galaxy in service of a cultic messiah. Complete unreason in other words. Your optimism concerning a turn toward a metaphysics open to transcendence after the dark machine age gives one hope that genuine human reason can outlast the coming devastation. But only if enough of us preserve what we have and strive to teach it to those younger than ourselves who will actually be performing the recovery

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