Since this book has such lame reviews, here’s mine:
First of all, if you’re the average crypto bro, you'll hate this book. Perhaps you'll feel better returning to your futile transhumanist goals and scoring some points in your favorite productivity app... Sadly, you are precisely the kind of person who should read this, but we know you won't =).
To be fair, the author drifts sometimes too far from "the machine age," only to come back and explain very briefly the current state of affairs. He sometimes gets lost in his arguments and is hard to understand why he is drifting; this is only because the ground the book tries to cover is too ambitious.
If one reads carefully, the goal of the book is to draw direct links from the early sources that developed into the "idea of progress in the west" all the way to the "futuristic goals of AI": this shows there is nothing but continuity in the proto-God pretentiousness that hides behind the "Artificial Intelligence project ".
The book promises three things, and it delivers:
- An Idea: the search for meaning has been the driver of human invention since prehistoric times. This includes the development of myths, a strong desire to understand death, and providing safety to society. These are the same goals that AI evangelists preach when justifying that the only way of salvation is through technological development.
- A History: most of the book is devoted to explaining how this development happened, mostly through the eyes of western development, but the author takes his time to clarify why in his view this is the case. There is a direct link between slavery-driven work (early greek-roman societies), colonialism + religious reformation (nothern-western European powers), Enlightenment + Industrial Revolution (the "western canon") and finally automation in modernity (technological globalization): the common denominator is how to optimize economic output. The way to achieve it is through propaganda and utopian dreams. Again, this long drift through history is entirely justified since it explains one of the main AI mantras: only technology can save us from the "curse of work" and "the curse of death" very primitive desires for what is worth. The book is also very good at pointing out that economic redundancy is mostly desired by elites and feared by the working classes because they are the ones who pay for the immediate trouble and do not see any immediate gains (even if it was the case that in the long term they will, however this is also debatable). This shows why the legitimacy of democratic governments is in crisis today..
- A Warning: This is mostly about the consequences of shaping everything in terms of optimization, with the logical, irrefutable outcome of dehumanization. It is not only about AI getting smart enough to replace humans but about humans getting dependent enough on tools and self-deprived of meaning enough to feel that everything they live for is mechanical work, and can be done by an automatic entity. If we are convinced that human redundancy is unavoidable, then this is a self-fulfilling prophecy for sure. More warnings about propaganda (both foreign and domestic), surveillance and why the State is so interested in promoting automation developments, for example: the West is now jealous of how much control China has over it's citizens, and how efficient this has made their economic output; so selling us the narrative of compete-or-perish is a sweet honey for western elites to preserve the global power they've accumulated through the centuries. Automation is for sure the elitist dream by excellence, but is it a Human dream? The author highly doubts so...
So, even though one can disagree with the author, a historic-economic take on how automation has affected human development and its relationship to work is very important for the current debate.