MorningSTAR – The Dawn said:
…the idea that we will be closer to utopia…
Because resources will be finite for the foreseeable future, conflict will remain a thing for many, many years to come. And that's just conflict over tangible things like oil or gold. Last I checked, ISIS cares about ideology, not raw resources.
How do you think humanity should adapt to the growing automation of jobs?
By the same way we've always adapted: shifting into less labor intensive jobs. Robots still need designers, engineers, technicians, etc. Media still needs people to write, act, direct, etc. Businesses still need designers, PR, and management.
Small businesses--which make up the vast majority of the US's economy--still need employees. Robots are expensive to buy, operate, and maintain. Not every dollar store or machine shop can buy a million dollar robot when paying a few paying a few people fifteen bucks an hour is much, much cheaper.
…and a post scarcity economy…
Have we mastered the art of converting energy to matter? If not, we're no where close to post scarcity. That won't happen for thousands of years--if ever, as, technically, the amount of total inhabitable space in the universe is still a finite thing.
I think that concept of money, scarcity and ultimately the need for labor need to be reevaluated if humans are to adapt to the automation.
A currency is merely a convenient way to exchange goods and services through a "middle man". The alternative is bartering, which is inefficient and not practical. Scarcity is a fundamental truth of economics. There will never be enough food, water, or resources on planet Earth to fully satisfy every single human and animal. It doesn't matter how many robots are working--there's still only x amount of iron on the planet.
Money will never go away--even in post-scarcity--since someone will always have something someone else wants. That DS9 episode about the baseball card illustrates this perfectly. Sure, Jake could just replicate the baseball card, but it doesn't hold the same meaning--and the same worth--as the authentic one.
Basilius said:
I suppose this is a tangent, but Now I’m curious if lisa thinks Star Trek is too idealistic. It seems to have a means of production hat automation would hope to achieve (Replicators), a loss of jobs outside StarFleet, and perhaps a lack of a need for jobs that aren’t tied to space exploration, and it influenced everything from the iPad to perhaps 3D Printing, It seems to be what people would think of in a general sense as the utopia the automation singularity would user in.
Star Trek's post-scarcity. Matter anti-matter reactors enable the replicators to do their thing. Even then there's still an economy, with the little used Federation credit An economy of "authenticity" would likely pop up in such a society. Where "hand crafted" items--not something that's synthesized by a replicator, or something that holds value due to its age (like an antique or fine wine), is prized and sought after. The baseball card is an example. As is Sisko's Creole Kitchen
It'd be funny. Everyone could be so desiring that "authentic" feel, that very little changes. Restaurants still exist despite unlimited, free food. Machines and toys are still build the old way even though they could now be printed in a second. You could imagine things carry on as normal, and the post-scarcity just acts as a safety net. If someone loses all their "authentic" possessions, they can just live on the orbital ring for a few years while they work to regain it.