Old age and Automation
Every developed nation is facing a demographic crisis. The only question is whether immigration helps. In my view (and Kotlikoff's) it does not because most of the immigrants are low income/low tax payers.
I don't think automation solves the problem either. For one thing, automation is mostly suited to assembly line situations, where very few people are working anyway. I don't think nurses will be automated and that's what old populations need.
Even if many professions become automated, how does that create an income stream to support retirees? All the companies will automate simultaneously, so it will not be a long term competitive advantage or big profit situation for them.
You could argue that the people freed up from automation will be able to do the elder care, and to some extent that may happen. But where the money comes from is still not settled.
A lot of the robot talk is overblown. "Machine vision" has been around for decades in some form. Computers cannot think, and cannot make goal directed decisions.
I believe they will never be able to.
A good book on this, written decades ago is "what computers can't do" by dreyfuss. I don't think any of his arguments have failed in the years since 1980.
Wiki:
prediction 1:
off by 30 years, and consider this:
Wiki:
.
prediction 2:
Computers were used as calculators in proving the 4 color map theorem, but that's hardly "discovering a new theorem"
Prediction 3):
Totally laughable.
Originally posted by aaron
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I don't think automation solves the problem either. For one thing, automation is mostly suited to assembly line situations, where very few people are working anyway. I don't think nurses will be automated and that's what old populations need.
Even if many professions become automated, how does that create an income stream to support retirees? All the companies will automate simultaneously, so it will not be a long term competitive advantage or big profit situation for them.
You could argue that the people freed up from automation will be able to do the elder care, and to some extent that may happen. But where the money comes from is still not settled.
A lot of the robot talk is overblown. "Machine vision" has been around for decades in some form. Computers cannot think, and cannot make goal directed decisions.
I believe they will never be able to.
A good book on this, written decades ago is "what computers can't do" by dreyfuss. I don't think any of his arguments have failed in the years since 1980.
Wiki:
In Alchemy and AI (1965) and What Computers Can't Do (1972), Dreyfus summarized the history of artificial intelligence and ridiculed the unbridled optimism that permeated the field. For example, Herbert A. Simon, following the success of his program General Problem Solver (1957), predicted that by 1967:[6]
The press reported these predictions in glowing reports of the imminent arrival of machine intelligence.
- A computer would be world champion in chess.
- A computer would discover and prove an important new mathematical theorem.
- Most theories in psychology will take the form of computer programs.
The press reported these predictions in glowing reports of the imminent arrival of machine intelligence.
off by 30 years, and consider this:
Wiki:
Deep Blue was a chess-playing computer developed by IBM. On May 11, 1997, the machine, with human intervention between games, won the second six-game match against world champion Garry Kasparov, two to one, with three draws.[1] Kasparov accused IBM of cheating and demanded a rematch. IBM refused and retired Deep Blue.[2] Kasparov had beaten a previous version of Deep Blue in 1996
prediction 2:
Computers were used as calculators in proving the 4 color map theorem, but that's hardly "discovering a new theorem"
Prediction 3):
Totally laughable.
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