In regard to the books and articles about "the way robots are taking our jobs away from us."
Thinking
 about the huge number of jobs that used to be performed by humans that 
can now be performed better and perhaps cheaper by robots, we should 
have a wide-ranging discussion.
At least one of the threads which should be explored should be, 
"well, maybe humans should work less."  But instead, the typical book or
 article on the subject goes right into "well, what other kinds of jobs 
might humans do?"
I've been trying to understand the reasons for this myopia and I've 
come up with at least two:  (1) Calvinism is not dead; and (2) economic 
models have enthralled us.
For the first, I guess people (even 
Chomsky seems to go this way) assume people want to "work" although 
Chomsky thinks they shouldn't do slave labor for wages or salary.  But Chomsky doesn't seem 
to think about people playing instead of working.  Not that play can't 
be serious, but one suspects that Chomsky himself is too much caught up 
in Calvinist philosophy; he himself has been "working" harder than ever 
since his wife died.
Leaving aside the need to make money, I guess the Calvinism implies 
that the kind of "work" people "ought" to do consists of activities that
 will benefit others, activities that are not selfish, and that "play" 
is "frivolous" and not of use or value to society.  What about art - is 
it work or play?  But of course if there are lots of robots to do 
things, people might be free to play a great deal of the time.
For the second reason, the mystique of economic models, I guess that
 most people assume that if we didn't work for money then we wouldn't 
have any money.  But manifestly this is not so.  One has only to look at
 a country like Kuwait which plows a lot of oil money back into various 
social welfare projects (I'm not advocating moving to Kuwait).  Money 
can be channeled (and is channeled) to people who don't work via 
government grants (viz., unemployment, welfare) and private charity.  
The problem here, of course, is that recipients of charity are DEEMED TO
 BE insufficient citizens because of their failure to work.
To a mathematician, all of this is so much balderdash.  If 90% of 
the work could be done by robots, people could "work" 10% of the time in
 return for 100% of the salary (so there was enough money flowing to 
keep the economy flowing).  Alternatively, if money was made equivalent 
to the labor of robots and it was made illegal to hire people to work 
for money, then human work, as we know it, would cease to exist, and we 
would rely on volunteer human activities to keep the robots busy.
The real issue is, how highly do we value having rich and poor people?
I
 think the rich value it a lot, because what they really want is 
implicit power over the poor, not just nice things for themselves.  
Status counts for a lot of power.  So I think the rich will push for 
Calvinism and push for the existing economic model and force the poor to
 earn less and less and at the same time damn the poor for accepting 
welfare or charity, and struggle to get even richer and to help their 
children be rich, too.
That last paragraph delineates the problem that must be solved 
first, before we worry about the effects of smart machines.  It is of 
course, a moral problem, and it is defined in human terms, not in 
dollars.
 
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