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Argo's avatar

When my friends ask me if I "have a job" with the family business, I tell them "no, I have work".

It's a difference I feel this article brings to light quite clearly. A job, which is what Mickey felt he had, is something imposed on you by a parent, an employer, or a government functionary. A sequence of chores that you did not ask for and did not want, which you try to avoid and minimize as much as possible.

Being an apprentice, by contrast, is work. The apprentice chooses to follow and learn from the master, with all the difficulties and capriciousness that may entail. Work, unlike a job, is something you give yourself. Automating this away means removing part of the reason you live.

I feel that this is a distinction lost on most today.

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Julie Gabrielli's avatar

Thanks for this great piece. It’s so timely, as we just had a workshop yesterday about the state of AI tools in higher ed classrooms. I’m a skeptic and worse (big issues with plagiarism, privacy and theft of original art to feed into the maw of AI engines).

And there’s the dignity of meaningful work. Why would I ever want AI to replace the best kinds of work that I do? Or the struggles that lead to growth?

Our workshop facilitator yesterday suggested we think of AI as an electric bike. You’re still the one driving, while the AI can assist on hills. It’s not meant to replace us but to help.

I’m still not convinced it’ll be worth all the downside--and that’s based on what we can see already. Of unintended consequences we have yet to imagine.

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