Player Piano

Player Piano is Kurt Vonnegut's first novel. It's set in a world where everything is automated to the point that jobs are practically non-existant…the kind of world that is more and more possible every day.

What are the possible repercussions of this kind of transformation? Vonnegut was not sanguine about the possibilities. It was the ultimate welfare state, and Player Piano did not end happily.

The repercussions of full automation is something that needs consideration now because it truly looks like the direction we're headed in. I'll be dead before it's done but my daughter and potential grandchildren will not, so it's something I'd rather see done properly. Robotic Freedom is an entry point to the first detailed examination of the possibilities and possible alternatives I've seen.Here's the summary of the case it makes:

As discussed in other essays in this series, we stand on the threshold of a robotic revolution. The automated checkout lines and kiosks we see popping up everywhere in stores, fast food restaurants and airports are the leading edge of a robotic wave that could displace 50% of the American workforce in the next several decades.

Even if the economy reconfigures and creates new jobs for everyone, there will be significant flux and turmoil as 50% of the working population retrains and moves to new careers. In addition, our current economic system is concentrating wealth at an accelerating rate. Robots will increase the concentration problem. The concentration creates a number of dysfunctional areas in our economy that hurt us as a society.

One solution is to change the economy in the following way -- We simply give everyone a check for $25,000 per year. It initially sounds impractical -- read the article to find out why this proposal would work and how it would solve a wide range of problems in the robotic economy.

Posted by Prometheus 6 on September 1, 2003 - 4:43pm :: News
 
 

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