Good thoughts. The world will always have its ups and downs. I don’t think tech can save us from it perpetually. Just like “Gods” and whatnot didn’t save the people of past perpetually. People have been through waves of utopia and hell for eons.
Anyway, I don’t have a bunch of data but I can share my personal experience.
I had my first kid, 6m old boy. Everybody seems to think he’s “The Buddha” due to his wise and alert vibes, and unusually calm and happy demeanor. He certainly seems to be relatively easy and joyful to care for compared to what we hear from every other parent, though of course he has his moments.
Everyone is different (and they should be, it obviously takes all sorts to build this world) but this to me is the only thing that’s important. And we did not teach him anything, we just became calm and clear headed ourselves. The baby just picked up the same mentality.
This seems to depend less on money, but a lot more on time. Ok some argue “Time = Money”, but not necessarily, especially in affluent countries like where I live. Every single person I know who has much more money than me, has far less time. And I don’t feel any of them work on anything particularly great or meaningful for society. My wife and I spent years crafting a very unique lifestyle which maximizes time above all else, and it did not involve getting very rich
So what if we all get uploaded to computers? Well his neural-net will be the clearest and happiest so everyone will want one like it. Take a look at any other future outcome and see if having a clear and happy mind is never of great benefit. Skills are secondary and can always be learned “on the job”—especially when you have a calm and clear head. Note that calmness and clarity does not equal laziness nor ineffectiveness. On the contrary, it helps one better determine where it’s worth putting in a lot of effort and where it’s a waste of time. It allows one to pick up new things quickly.
Good thoughts. The world will always have its ups and downs. I don’t think tech can save us from it perpetually. Just like “Gods” and whatnot didn’t save the people of past perpetually. People have been through waves of utopia and hell for eons.
Anyway, I don’t have a bunch of data but I can share my personal experience.
I had my first kid, 6m old boy. Everybody seems to think he’s “The Buddha” due to his wise and alert vibes, and unusually calm and happy demeanor. He certainly seems to be relatively easy and joyful to care for compared to what we hear from every other parent, though of course he has his moments.
Everyone is different (and they should be, it obviously takes all sorts to build this world) but this to me is the only thing that’s important. And we did not teach him anything, we just became calm and clear headed ourselves. The baby just picked up the same mentality.
This seems to depend less on money, but a lot more on time. Ok some argue “Time = Money”, but not necessarily, especially in affluent countries like where I live. Every single person I know who has much more money than me, has far less time. And I don’t feel any of them work on anything particularly great or meaningful for society. My wife and I spent years crafting a very unique lifestyle which maximizes time above all else, and it did not involve getting very rich
So what if we all get uploaded to computers? Well his neural-net will be the clearest and happiest so everyone will want one like it. Take a look at any other future outcome and see if having a clear and happy mind is never of great benefit. Skills are secondary and can always be learned “on the job”—especially when you have a calm and clear head. Note that calmness and clarity does not equal laziness nor ineffectiveness. On the contrary, it helps one better determine where it’s worth putting in a lot of effort and where it’s a waste of time. It allows one to pick up new things quickly.