As it’s the result of about two minutes thought, I’m not very confident about how internally consistent this idea is.
If finding non-trivial problems is tedious work, I imagine people with a preference for tedious work (or who just don’t care about satisfying problems) would probably rather buy art/prostitutes/spaceship rides, etc. This is the bit I find hardest to internally reconcile, as a society in which most work has become trivially easy is probably post-scarcity.
I personally don’t find the search for non-trivial problems all that tedious, but if I could turn to a computer and ask “is [problem X] trivial to solve?”, and it came back with “yes” 99.999% of the time, I might think differently.
I don’t think you’ve answered my question, but you’ve got an interesting idea there.
What do people buy which would be more satisfying than solving the problems they’re found?
Also, this may be a matter of the difference between your and my temperaments, but is finding non-trivial problems that tedious?
As it’s the result of about two minutes thought, I’m not very confident about how internally consistent this idea is.
If finding non-trivial problems is tedious work, I imagine people with a preference for tedious work (or who just don’t care about satisfying problems) would probably rather buy art/prostitutes/spaceship rides, etc. This is the bit I find hardest to internally reconcile, as a society in which most work has become trivially easy is probably post-scarcity.
I personally don’t find the search for non-trivial problems all that tedious, but if I could turn to a computer and ask “is [problem X] trivial to solve?”, and it came back with “yes” 99.999% of the time, I might think differently.