
A World Without Work: Technology, Automation and How We Should Respond

A different tack, rather than looking at human faculties and asking whether they can be replicated by a machine, is to consider the tasks themselves and ask whether they have features that make them easier or harder for a machine to handle. For instance, if you come across a task where it is easy to define the goal, straightforward to tell whether
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For AI researchers, the absence of AGI is a pressing bottleneck; but in economics, it is a far weaker constraint on automation than commonly imagined. If a job is made up of ten tasks, for instance, there are two ways that progress in AI could make it disappear.
Daniel Susskind • A World Without Work: Technology, Automation and How We Should Respond
The ancient Greek poet Archilochus once wrote: ‘The fox knows many things, but the hedgehog knows one big thing.’ Isaiah Berlin, who found this mysterious line in the surviving scraps of Archilochus’ poetry, famously used it as a metaphor to distinguish between two types of human being: people who know a little about a lot (the foxes) and people wh
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Weizenbaum did not expect very much from ELIZA because he knew that while the system might outwardly appear to be intelligent, it did not in fact think or feel like a human therapist at all. ‘I had thought it essential,’ he wrote, ‘as a prerequisite to the very possibility that one person might help another learn to cope with his emotional problems
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