Exactly. And I think what you're getting at lines up beautifully with Maslow’s hierarchy of needs. If AI, robotics, and clean energy take care of the base of the pyramid—physiological needs and safety—then we’re finally free to live in the upper layers full-time.Zenita01 wrote: ↑Wed Apr 23, 2025 12:03 pm If we hit that point where machines do everything, and stuff becomes free, I think the real curveball is boredom. Not just in the “what do I do all day?” sense, but deep, existential boredom. Like, when survival’s not a thing and there’s no pressure to earn or hustle, what keeps people moving?
We might end up with a weird divide, not between rich and poor, but between people who create meaning and people who just float. You’d get folks diving into art, philosophy, space travel, digital worlds, not for money, but because it feels real. And others who just check out, living in auto-pilot because nothing demands their attention anymore.
So maybe the new “job” is actually figuring yourself out. Like emotional and psychological work becomes the new frontier
Social connection, esteem, self-actualization—those don’t disappear in a post-labor world. They become central. People won’t just “float” unless we fail to cultivate meaning. And you’re right, meaning doesn’t come from pressure or paycheck—it comes from purpose.
So the future isn't a void. It’s a blank canvas. People will paint it with creativity, exploration, learning, service, even spiritual or philosophical depth. There is plenty of interesting stuff to do. The difference is, we’ll do it because it matters to us—not because we’re trying to earn the right to eat.
And that shift, honestly, could be the most important one in human history.