From: Dan Fabulich (daniel.fabulich@yale.edu)
Date: Sun Apr 26 1998 - 21:32:09 MDT
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Jeremy Ulrey wrote:
>>>>
We've all heard the fears that manual laborers are too resistant to losing
their jobs as a result of technological progress- what do we do with these
people?
<<<<
Stop crushing their opportunity to educate themselves. Pay them their due.
Make the economy grow. You know, stuff like that.
>>>>
How much of a public demand will be required for any given product to make
it worthwhile to produce?
<<<<
Well, a lot of people having read about nanotechnology wonder if one day we
mightn't have something comparable to the "anything box": Put in the
requisite energy and out comes whatever you want. While I'm sure this will
happen SOME DAY, I don't expect to see that particular implementation of
nanotechnology very soon. However, it seems that we are talking about
near/post singularity time scales here, so I'm free to speculate. :)
>>>>
Exactly how much wealth will there be to go around?
<<<<
I'm not certain what you mean by this. More than today. Not enough. :)
>>>>
What new forms of entertainment will arise out of the ashes of the
market-driven archetypes?
<<<<
Considering the degree of control which I imagine posthumans could have
over their mind and their thought processes, it's hard to imagine what
entertainment would be like. I don't think Holodecks could even compare to
what a posthuman might be able to do to their own mind.
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: PGP for Personal Privacy 5.5.3
iQEVAwUBNUP8N/JQm6Y3yAfNAQHrCAf9G9K3UBETrAKnNyYTUBJjVGWYNu+JaELw
AVNTdfeVYVK9o/3IgVniZGJnhuB7ga2eYupeWXeFBsEMoUDb66U2K5KgDBIbj9OP
QLShgbO7y/9wIizILUhAu4IvxD3nV9/2NnbfLV6xkJaa3Lrj61lI+ra/p3GlJYI0
nzaJ6YALf8DlRRJfKsczjS7jXkwJw/js1lWivCePyWxGfkGqM1OtfrXc0dX+bzO+
hRmGz0tIfxn+tdjcRMjq24lq3uKBkPvn6KD1WbRPmyxpG9lhKSdhZMSwIDaf8R3/
Hc/zYY08+rrROzmyMHj1TT3DWv/8kjjN7aSef9ymuwYWDMqWe3rV4w==
=fUfe
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
-TODAY IS A GOOD DAY TO LIVE-
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Fri Nov 01 2002 - 14:48:59 MST