Fryowa
Administrator
If wealth/resources/whatever you want to call it are easily available and easily produced with AI, then the incentive to horde and distribute goes away. Think about it...if the energy problem was no longer a concern, and we had machines (AI) to do any and everything that was dangerous or unpleasant, what would be the incentive to have someone or something horde it? Just like if there are 5 Honus Wagner cards out there it's natural to horde. If there are 500,000 of them out there they'd get thrown in every trash bin.Sounds like Utopia, except for the fact that labor is our society's only tool for redistributing the wealth that productivity leads to. If we have massive increases in productivity and hence wealth, but no means to distribute it, then what?
If AI say came up with a solution to ubiquitously available nuclear power with no emissions, and could solve most if not all the "problems" out there, what incentive would there be to compete over oil, minerals, etc? Because that's all this thing is if you think about it. Countries and groups know that right now under current technology there's a limited amount of energy and resources and labor to produce it. Everything with wars, nationalism, etc. is just a competition of who can collect and defend the most of it. When technology makes those things commonplace, the competition for it goes away. It sounds stupid, but it's reality. Is that oversimplified? Probably. But the core idea is true IMO. What value is energy if technology has made it abundant and "free?" What value is oil if you don't need it? What value is gold? What value is means of production or a labor force if you don't need it?
Again this goes back to any major advances in technology. It will just be a paradigm shift. People were terrified of the same thing when internal combustion engines started automating thousands of jobs. We just shifted to our "work" being different things. Those different things don't have to be manual labor driving trucks or writing code or diagnosing patients. It isn't like this is all going to turn off with the flick of a switch. It will happen gradually (albeit with accelerating speed), and people will adjust. It's what we do as life forms.Probably as important, we need to figure out what our lives are for. Most of us define ourselves via our jobs/economic output. If humans are no longer responsible for that, how do we derive meaning in our lives? There are all sorts of very pro-social ways we can think about ourselves, but this will be a massive change at how we look at things.