Wednesday, December 27, 2017

New Economy part 3 in series

  Given the ever increasing rise of machine intelligence,  humans will increasingly not be able to compete across greater spectrums of machine automated production modes.  This isn't merely in manufacturing or transportation sectors but increasingly affecting service sector economies.  Nonetheless I think we are entering into a new chapter in social and economic history...could we be ready to affirm in our own soon to be social history the birth of the Machine Intelligence Revolution?  This has broad impact to civilization and the ways that we will live in the future.

Questions to consider:  why is there mostly scant thoughts with respect to existing impacts?  And why consideration without so much consideration to social and economic displacements?   Is it sufficient and fair to argue that the luxuries of such revolution should only increase worker productivity while marginally having impact to worker population numbers, for instance? 

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