John Danaher, Senior Lecturer in Law at NUI Galway, discusses his new book, Automation and Utopia: Human Flourishing in a World Without Work.
 
On the season finale of Technology & Prose, John Danaher joins host Nikita Aggarwal to talk about the meaning of work (1:13), the automatability and automation of work (2:36), why we should welcome automation — the case for technological unemployment (10:02), the gig economy, Uber, and the limits to improving the conditions of work (13:25), building a post-work future - the ‘cyborg utopia’ and the ‘virtual utopia’ (19:25), problems with cyborgization (22:44), the meaning of utopia (28:00), the concept of virtual reality (29:53), constructing a virtual utopia, the ‘utopia of games’ (34:40), psychedelics and other sources of human flourishing in a post-work future (41:25), Big Tech, universal basic income (UBI) and the political economy of virtual utopia (42:34).
 
References
Manyika et al, A Future that Works: Automation, Employment and Productivity
Frey and Osborne, The Future of Employment: How Susceptible are Jobs to Computerisation? 
Moravec’s paradox
Robertson, Robo Sapiens Japanicus 
UK Supreme Court decision in Uber v Aslam 
Gallup, State of the Global Workplace Report  
Harari, Sapiens and Homo Deus 
Suits, The Grasshopper: Games, Life and Utopia 
Macintyre, After Virtue 
 
Check out John’s blog and podcast, Philosophical Disquisitions
 
Recorded on 29th March 2021.

Technology & Prose

Nikita Aggarwal

John Danaher on Automation and Utopia

APR 15, 202147 MIN
Technology & Prose

John Danaher on Automation and Utopia

APR 15, 202147 MIN

Description

John Danaher, Senior Lecturer in Law at NUI Galway, discusses his new book, Automation and Utopia: Human Flourishing in a World Without Work.   On the season finale of Technology & Prose, John Danaher joins host Nikita Aggarwal to talk about the meaning of work (1:13), the automatability and automation of work (2:36), why we should welcome automation — the case for technological unemployment (10:02), the gig economy, Uber, and the limits to improving the conditions of work (13:25), building a post-work future - the ‘cyborg utopia’ and the ‘virtual utopia’ (19:25), problems with cyborgization (22:44), the meaning of utopia (28:00), the concept of virtual reality (29:53), constructing a virtual utopia, the ‘utopia of games’ (34:40), psychedelics and other sources of human flourishing in a post-work future (41:25), Big Tech, universal basic income (UBI) and the political economy of virtual utopia (42:34).   References Manyika et al, A Future that Works: Automation, Employment and Productivity Frey and Osborne, The Future of Employment: How Susceptible are Jobs to Computerisation?  Moravec’s paradox Robertson, Robo Sapiens Japanicus  UK Supreme Court decision in Uber v Aslam  Gallup, State of the Global Workplace Report   Harari, Sapiens and Homo Deus  Suits, The Grasshopper: Games, Life and Utopia  Macintyre, After Virtue    Check out John’s blog and podcast, Philosophical Disquisitions   Recorded on 29th March 2021.