(January 15, 2019 at 8:15 am)AFTT47 Wrote: The systems will likely use multiple layers of redundancy and be programmed to pull over in stop if any one element fails.
This is just a lame attempt to justify the silly argument that people are reduced by having machines do their labor. Instead, it frees them up to do other things.
Quite a bit of straw there. I like machines. But machines do enable the abandonment of basic life skills to a degree that is not easily measurable, so we don't really know what the potential cost might be in the long wrong. It makes sense to be thinking about these things, rather than making vapid strawman statements in opposition.
We do not inherit the world from our parents. We borrow it from our children.