http://www.peoplescapitalism.org/Weird.
It's not really weird, assuming we admit the initial assumption. Basically, the assumption is: robots replace all labour.
If so, then everyone simply owns robotics and, at least, receives income from ownership of capital goods. Then there are only capitalists, landowners, and entrepreneurs.
However, as far as experience today:
1) Automated processing machines which are very advanced today, on the other, hand are very capable of replacing labour. But they require a professional machinist to program the parameters for every fabrication job. It can't even be done via CAD; it has to be done on each machine. In other words, there is demand for higher-trained labour.
2) AI can pour a cup of coffee, without programmers. Maybe it can pour it without spilling it.
3) If I am a capitalist, but I engage in design of my robots, then I engage in labour. Which means that labour is still the major component of the economy. That is, unless robots can design themselves...
I read several chapters, but Albus doesn't really understand subjective goods-character, because of his notion of going from output capitalism to storage capitalism, via elimination of "trivia."
In other words, you can have any color car, so long as its black (as Ford said). But what if I don't "want" black? Perhaps I won't buy his car. It has no value, then, and neither do the capital goods producing it. This is the major theoretical flaw.
Actually, Albus has been pretty successful with this idea politically. Look at his wikipedia.
The Late Andrew Ryan:Blug, too much reading. From what I read it seems like a possibility within 50 years. I fail to see exactly why he feels this is a new system rather than a natural evolution of the current one... How does he think capital should be distributed? The wall of text overwhelmed me at this late hour
50 years from now we'll be in a government-induced dark age. I doubt there'll be any kind of technological advances, unless they assist in killing, torturing, maiming, and spying on people.
Periodically the tree of liberty must be watered with the blood of tyrants and patriots.
Thomas Jefferson
Basic Concepts
An exciting change is taking place. Socialism....with robots! It's the robots part which gives it the spiffy new car smell. Technocrats seem to be making a resurgence.
'Men do not change, they unmask themselves' - Germaine de Stael
Isn't this something like Douglas Social Credit? http://douglassocialcredit.com/
Sounds like socialism.
You observe, but you do not see.
Justin Laws: Isn't this something like Douglas Social Credit? http://douglassocialcredit.com/ Sounds like socialism.
It's socialism with technology.
Wanderer: The Late Andrew Ryan:Blug, too much reading. From what I read it seems like a possibility within 50 years. I fail to see exactly why he feels this is a new system rather than a natural evolution of the current one... How does he think capital should be distributed? The wall of text overwhelmed me at this late hour 50 years from now we'll be in a government-induced dark age. I doubt there'll be any kind of technological advances, unless they assist in killing, torturing, maiming, and spying on people.
Lol well aren't you the optimistic one?
,,,,Probably right though
Lo, tis the double post.