Kracus wrote:Tormentius wrote:This trend won't lead to more people being unemployed IMO. It will simply change the types of jobs which people do.
I disagree, robots are going to bring in a new type of goverment and economy. All this "free" labour will eventualy free the human race to pursue other matters than survivial. Survival is the reason we work now but when a robot capable of doing anything a human can gains enough intelligence to do routine tasks for us it's only a matter of time before we have our own personal slaves. We can send them to work and get an hourly wage in any labour force and sit home and collect the money.
The economy is going to have to be changed for it to function. The problem though is I doubt we'll see it at this level. Be the time robotics reach this level of perfection and have viable power sources I figure I'll be in my 70's or 80's

You are simplifying a great much. Tormentius is on the right track and is the more accepted idea by sociologists and computer scientists.
To reach the level of complete and upmost independence, we need robots that can essentially program themselves. In essence, the only way for them to handle every possible situation much like the animal kingdom does. However, this is easier said than done.
Realistically, we might be able to have robots which serve a certain purpose and does it well. Say a juicer-bot or vacum-bot (think The Jetsons).
However, you can not forget the fact that with every new technology, there is a series of jobs necessary to maintain it. Perhaps we will no longer have supermarket baggers/cashiers, but is that really an issue?
The job will simply move the lowest position on the economic chain to a "robot supervisor" or repair tech. Somebody will need to perform maintenance on the robot's programming and physical state.
Self contained systems are extremelly difficult to maintain. Even the simplest electronic appliance needs replacement and maintenance.
The REAL issue lies many more generations ahead with great speculation. If we do reach a point where a robot essentially acts/behaves like a human where do we draw the line? Do we accept them as members of society or do they remain slaves? What do we do when a robot chooses to be baptized? What if a robot wants to kill itself, other robots, or us?
The stereotypical movie issues mentioned above are nowhere near in our future. However, what I personally fear the most is how we've become more and more dependant on our technology. Most people can't fathom living without a car and television. THAT is scarier to me than a bunch of robots doing dirty work. I've met local kids who depend on a calculator to do their math homework. I find it pathetic, but it is a reality which can lead to our downfall.
edit: my sources come from college level philosophy, computer science, and artificial intelligence books.
PS: Most people run OS's with drastic programming flaws and errors. The same programmers will be coding the robots of tomorrow. I expect to have robots that do your grocery for you, but always bring back the wrong stuff. Some cities can't even get their traffic lighting system to function properly, and we want to have robots sustain themselves?