I was reading John Cage's "A Year From Monday", and in this
(page 56)
he mentioned a U.S. gov't commission (maybe?) called the "Committee of eight on Automation, Economics and Employment", a group which was apparently formed to "consider whether U.S. society should be geared for employment or unemployment voted six to two in favor of employment."
This has perplexed me for a few years now. Does anybody have any information on this group?
_________________ Be very, very careful what you put into that head, because you will never, ever get it out. - Cardinal Wolsey
MockingGods Master of Logic
Joined: Nov 14, 2002
Posts: 5693
Location: Planet Earth
Posted:
Sat Oct 31, 2009 12:57 am
DigitalAtheist wrote:
Infidel people of the earth:
I was reading John Cage's "A Year From Monday", and in this
(page 56)
he mentioned a U.S. gov't commission (maybe?) called the "Committee of eight on Automation, Economics and Employment", a group which was apparently formed to "consider whether U.S. society should be geared for employment or unemployment voted six to two in favor of employment."
This has perplexed me for a few years now. Does anybody have any information on this group?
Wooo... this is very interesting. Under our current economic model, I'm not surprised that a high percentage voted for employment. However, I'm interested in why the 2 voted against it. Do they see what's coming? Do they too see a world where human labor will mostly become unnecessary? Do they understand the quandary high levels of automation places upon our current systems? If we obtain the ability to automate nearly all human labor, how then do we compensate people so they can purchase things? Do we completely abandon the compensation model?
Oh... I don't have any information on the group, but I'm going to look into it.
DigitalAtheist Graduate Thinker
Joined: Apr 13, 2009
Posts: 661
Location: Canada
Posted:
Thu Jun 17, 2010 5:24 pm
I found this scrawled on an old napkin, and I believe it is related to the hunt that I mention in this thread:
on the napkin I wrote:
industrial automation
Rosenlew (1970s) Erkki Kurenniemi
University of Arizona
Automation House, 49 East 68th Street, NY, NY
I'm hoping that this spurs something for someone. Let us know.
_________________ Be very, very careful what you put into that head, because you will never, ever get it out. - Cardinal Wolsey
harrisandreson Just Arrived
Joined: Mar 14, 2010
Posts: 6
Posted:
Sun Mar 13, 2011 11:18 am
Economics and Employment", a group which was apparently formed to "consider whether U.S. society should be geared for employment or unemployment voted six to two in favor of employment
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