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by kwhitefoot
1803 days ago
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> Frankly, if machines can take away the mechanical bullshit part of a job and let us humans do the interesting, creative work, that works for me. How much "interesting, creative work" is there? Surely most of the work that most of us do, and that most of us are capable of and interested in, is not simultaneously interesting and creative. I count myself as lucky and I have certainly had a more interesting working life than average but the proportion of that forty years of work that counted as both interesting and creative is probably, looking back on it, measured in single digit percentage points. If a machine does all the easy stuff how would I ever get enough practice to stretch myself to the difficult creative parts? |
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I would imagine that the answer is roughly "infinite". It's like asking "how much art is there?" - infinite.
> If a machine does all the easy stuff how would I ever get enough practice to stretch myself to the difficult creative parts?
By doing the easy stuff? I don't know, you can do whatever you want.