tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3538502828554372917.post8265848556775755485..comments2024-03-28T07:57:49.338+00:00Comments on Poul Anderson Appreciation: The Future Of HumanityKetlanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08588156788583883454noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3538502828554372917.post-36587989579641324122017-05-26T15:34:00.953+01:002017-05-26T15:34:00.953+01:00Kaor, Paul!
Early extinction of the human race? I...Kaor, Paul!<br /><br />Early extinction of the human race? I think you had Anderson's "Murphy's Hall" in mind here. One of his grimmer tales indeed!<br /><br />And of course I would prefer "proliferation" thru out the galaxy, whether by STL or FTL means.<br /><br />I would have sharpened your "unemployment and redundancy" comment by adding something like "ennui and existential despair."<br /><br />And mankind being replaced by AIs, as seen in GENESIS, doesn't seem much better than what we see in "Murphy's Hall."<br /><br />I still think you gloss over too quickly the problems we will very likely face in any "post scarcity" economy. Such as mass "unemployment and redundancy." It's all very well to vaguely say society as a whole should use enhanced technology to enable everyone to realize their full potential. The problem is that NOT EVERYONE will be equally talented or even merely intellectually minded. I don't think many, many people will care about philosophy and the arts (altho I hope I will be proven wrong).<br /><br />While advanced technology might give us some of "citizen's credit" sufficient for decent comfort, I have to argue that man does not live by bread alone. If a carpenter or plumber who had taken satisfaction in doing that kind of work well is no longer needed, what then? Unless such person also had additional or unexpected interests, I see them as too likely to suffer from despair, boredom, ennui in a post scarcity economy. Poul Anderson touched on such ideas as early as "Quixote And The Windmill."<br /><br />I have argued that one way of avoiding or easing such problems as described above would be if mankind had a frontier, other planets where people unhappy on Earth could settle and have a chance of doing work they find satisfactory. Because I think, given a FTL drive, many colonial would not or could not use the most advanced technology right away, so many colonists would still be able to take satisfaction in doing even "primitive" kinds of work.<br /><br />Also, if there was a frontier, I think that would greatly relieve the strain and stress in a post scarcity economy of what to do about bored, unhappy, frustrated, increasingly angry people. A frontier would act as a safety valve for Earth giving the most unhappy people options.<br /><br />Something like what we see in "Quixote and The Windmill" and GENESIS might have happened in the Technic Civilization series if no FTL drive had been invented.<br /><br />SeanSean M. Brookshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13973738112230622557noreply@blogger.com