by Rune » Sun 20 Oct 2013, 01:20:56
Vortex$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Jed Rothwell', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Blaze Spinnaker', 'T')hey should do an experiment. Randomly select 100 kids in high school and
tell them that they'll get paid a min income for the rest of their life.
Find out where they are in 4 years versus a control group.
This experiment has been done millions of times throughout history, and it
is done thousands of times a year in any first-world country. The high
school kids are called "trust fund babies." They are the children of the
rich. We know what happens to them. Some screw up and live irresponsibly,
like the character "Arthur" in the movie by that title. Others make
ordinary contributions to society. Still others -- such as Thomas Jefferson
-- take advantage of their wealth and position in society to accomplish
great things.
Middle class and poor people also diverge in this way. Some ruin their
lives; some are normal; others do great things. It is difficult to say
whether having money enhances the likelihood of success, or subverts it. I
suppose it depends on the person. I know for a fact that some people who
are free to do anything they like will spend a lifetime doing difficult,
painstaking work, and even boring work because they feel it is worthwhile
and of value to society. Work such editing cold fusion papers and
organizing a web site devoted to them. I expert the contributions of such
people make up for the lost productivity of several wastrels and lazy
drones who waste their lives.
In his masterpiece "Profiles of the Future" Arthur Clarke described the
ultimate machine, the replicator, which can supply any material good at
no effort or expense. In the chapter titled "Aladdin's Lamp" he described
the effect it might have on society:
"It is certainly fortunate that the replicator, if it can ever be built at
all, lies far in the future, at the end of many social revolutions.
Confronted by it, our own culture would collapse speedily into sybaritic
hedonism, followed immediately by the boredom of absolute satiety.
Some cynics may doubt if any society of human beings could adjust itself to
unlimited abundance and the lifting of the curse of Adam—a curse which may
be a blessing in disguise.
Yet in every age, a few men have known such freedom, and not all of them
have been corrupted by it. Indeed, I would define a civilized man as one
who can be happily occupied for a lifetime even if he has no need to work
for a living. This means that the greatest problem of the future is
civilizing the human race; but we know that already."
- Jed
Let's say this system is in place in the US. And $2,800 buys what $2,800 buys.
If I were smart enough to do better than my peers and the machines, I would read a lot, be a science journalist and futurist.
If I were not smart enough, I would read a lot and experiment a lot with altered states.