Submitted by oldmanhero t3_zrsc3x in singularity
Hank Green, of all people, posted something recently about the pace of change we're seeing, and he made a point I hadn't fully considered previously, which is that, at a societal level, at least, we are already changing too fast for us (ie our institutions) to keep up.
Since then I've been thinking about the next 20 years, particularly in terms of work, and I find myself wondering more and more whether we might already be in the midst of that knee in the curve where change goes vertical.
Imagine, for example, trying to advise a child entering high school or junior high next year about what careers will still be viable when they grow up. Can you confidently choose 5 careers you think will still be available to a regular person in 10 to 20 years? I could take some guesses, but I wouldn't be confident about them.
MNFuturist t1_j14shjd wrote
The near-term problem isn't AI replacing careers 1:1 (eg. the AI doing everything a person does in their job.) It's an AI slowly replacing each of the 100+ sub-functions of each job. Death by a 1,000 cuts, not one-shot, one-kill. The pool of remaining functions that only humans can do gets smaller and smaller (even with a few new ones added along the way) and the "human" roles keep getting recombined into what's left that only they can do. That's why the whole "augmentation not replacement" argument is garbage. The net result is fewer humans working.