Friday, December 05, 2014

Are Humans Necessary?

a NYT Opinion Piece by Margaret Atwood:
Every technology we’ve ever made has also altered the way we live. So how different will our lives be if the future we choose is the one with all these robots in it?
 More to the point, how will we power that future? Every modern robotic form that exists, and every one still to come, depends on a supply of cheap energy. If the energy disappears, so will the robots. And, to a large degree, so will we, since the lifestyle we have built and come to depend on floats on a sea of electricity. Hephaestus’ bronze giant was powered by the ichor of the divine gods; we can’t use that, but we need to think up another energy source that’s both widely available and won’t end up killing us.

If we can’t do that, the number of possible futures available to us will shrink dramatically to one. It won’t be the Hurrah; it will be the Yikes. This will perhaps be followed — as in a Ray Bradbury story — by a chorus of battery-powered robotic voices that continues long after our own voices have fallen silent.
From the Comments...

When you don't understand that capitalism is using equipment (capital) to replace human misery, you write stories about humans then being unnecessary and a bizarre new york city view of vertical farming. Such writing is at best useless, at worst dangerous and should be kept to street vendors in the village.


1 comment:

  1. I wonder what human misery the commenting person is referring to. Working with one's hands? Using a pack and shovel? What can capitalism do for the 11,000,000 refugees in Syria? Indeed, what is it doing right now?

    ReplyDelete