We need to cultivate such expertise, because things are indeed getting more and more complex. "One size fits all" methods will not work.
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The real problem is economy has not evolved to support diverse, individualized service. Industrialization was all about mass production.
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A deeper problem is that without an incentive to cultivate expertise, there will be no purpose for life in old age. http://the-redpill.blogspot.de/2015/05/growing-old-in-age-of-machine-learning.html …
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Replying to @vakibs
Let us stop all these newfangled fads the kids are using so I can grow old as a wise venerated prophet of what I learned 20 years ago
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Replying to @Plinz
I am not saying that at all. In my essay, I wrote about the diversity of human societies in how they treat old people.
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Certain nomadic societies actually kill old women because their contributions are no longer relevant to a new terrain. They are a baggage.
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Engineers and technical workers, who need to spend a long time building something, they are equivalent to women in reproductive currency.
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Financial investors who can very quickly move their capital from one place to another are like men, who disperse semen facing fewer losses.
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Replying to @vakibs
I think that your metaphors are moving into dangerous territory! You seem to be applying a normative view to evolution?
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Replying to @Plinz
Don't read my metaphors any more than as illuminating a particular aspect of the problem. They are not exact equivalents :)
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But it is not a problem that financial investors are spreading their sperm, unless I have to sit in it.
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