Over the past few months I've read a few quotes and discussions about people who predicted that technology will eventually become so advanced that people won't *have* to work. We could feasibly have very short work weeks, if not, not work at all, and have technology take care of the hard stuff. Years ago I would have thought that this was a reasonable goal, but these days I'm not so sure, at least to a degree.
To put it simply, it comes back to the old saying: happiness comes from something to do, someone to love, and something to hope for. When you look at people as a biological system we're energy consumers who ideally need to expend as much energy as we intake. So in our natural state we have to do things, we have to do energetic work, whether that work is obligatory or not. And so it would seem that eliminating the need for things to do is actually counter-productive to our natural state.
Take the idea to the extreme and imagine that no one at all worked. Just think about how much free time we would have to spend, and how much time we'd have to spend doing pointless things just to move around a bit.
And so I think the reality of a happy, or happier life, happens when people find a good balance between work and free time, not have nothing but free time.
I totally disagree. And I am actually saddened to read this.
The problem is that people like my dad who worked all his life and does not know himself or what his interests are don't know what they want to do. My dad essentially does not know what he enjoys because his whole life he worked. My parents are retired, but they don't seem to do very much. But this can be dealt with.
When I was severely depressed, my psychologists and psychiatrists constantly drilled it into my head that I need to find more interests. It really sucked at first because I hated almost everything I tried. But one by one, I started realizing a whole new world of interests. It changed my life, but unfortunately I don't have the money or time to be doing them.
People can find all kinds of things to do. Automated systems will give us a choice in what we want to work on.
Here's a list of things that I wish I had more time and resources to do:
- travel the world and spend as much time as possible learning the culture, seeing the random sights, and just being a part of a foreign society.
- meet new people and hear their stories
- learn a few languages
- learn as much history, physics, math, computer programming, computer science, etc. as possible
- cook amazing meals for supper everyday (the recipes are expensive and complicated but are absolutely thrilling to eat!)
- work on an old car and make it look brand new
- screenwriting in hopes of seeing it make it to the big screen
- write a novel
- play more tennis and golf
- try paining, acting, rally racing, drifting
- I have always wanted to canoe across Canada
- read more novels, watch more movies, play video games, etc.
- build a small habitat in my house for sugar gliders (I loved my sugar glider; he was actually a lot of work)
I have a friend who hasn't had to work in 10 years. He's only 38 now. He always calls me from some city while doing something interesting and fun. I see him doing these things, and it is as good as one would think it could be.