Submitted by Current_Side_4024 t3_zp2gpp in singularity
Our social contract has historically been based around labour. People demonstrate their value by doing work that at least theoretically serves the greater whole. And they do this work at least theoretically pretty much everyday, most of their lives. People know they can trust someone bc they do a job. That’s the logic we use anyway to organize ourselves. Those who do not work are seen as inherently untrustworthy, an enemy of the state, someone who should be belittled.
If automation takes over most of the jobs, we will no longer have a means of identifying people. We won’t know who is trustworthy and who isn’t. The whole social contract will be shredded. We will need a new social contract, and it hasn’t been written yet. Nobody knows what it will say bc we don’t yet have a need to write it, though that need is growing day by day.
Many people assume that without the existing social contract, it will be chaos, and everyone will die. But that’s foolishness. Where there’s a will, there’s a way. I think we just need to admit that we don’t know how we will relate to each other in the future, but that doesn’t mean we won’t relate to each other at all. There is a future waiting for us, but we don’t yet know what it is. It won’t be chaos and death though. Society has changed before and it will change again. Whenever it changes, there’s always a lot of people who think this is the end. But society is flexible, far more flexible than we realize.
That’s my two cents.
SteppenAxolotl t1_j0q7in3 wrote
>Many people assume that without the existing social contract, it will be chaos
There is no existing social contract, it never existed. It was just some philosophical nonsense that was bandied about.