AI, Automation, and the Post-Work Identity Crisis - Softcover

Riemann, Bernd

 
9798258670823: AI, Automation, and the Post-Work Identity Crisis

Synopsis

In his seminal work, AI, Automation, and the Post-Work Identity Crisis, Bernd Riemann delivers a rigorous empirical and philosophical analysis of the modern labor era. As we stand on the precipice of a transition, the traditional social contract—which for centuries tethered human dignity to productive output—is not merely fraying; it is reaching a terminal structural end. Riemann’s analysis serves as a vital diagnostic tool for a species being systematically superseded by its own creations, offering a strategic framework for a future where human presence has shifted from a logistical asset to an economic friction.

The book is structured into a transformative three-part journey. In Part I, The Replacement Trajectory, Riemann dismantles the comforting myth of the centaur—the idealized partnership between human intuition and machine speed. Utilizing high-frequency data from the financial and legal sectors, he demonstrates that the 400-millisecond biological latency of the human mind is now a liability in an age where AI operates in microseconds. From the collapse of entry-level professional roles to the rise of fully autonomous dark warehouses that require neither light nor heat for their robotic inhabitants, Part I proves that machines are no longer just assisting us; they are liquidating the very need for us.

Part II, The Short-Term Limbo, explores the resulting sociological hollowing-out of the global economy. Riemann documents the terminal decline of middle-skill jobs, where the cost-efficiency of algorithmic labor has made human employment 250 times more expensive than its digital equivalent. This section exposes the rise of a bullshit economy—a landscape of performative labor and administrative inflation that masks a deeper existential vacuum. As the traditional degree-to-wealth pipeline shatters and wealth concentrates in the hands of capital owners, the middle class faces an unprecedented identity crisis, characterized by systemic fiscal decay and the emergence of a global precariat.

In the final section, The New Anchors of Meaning, Riemann pivots from diagnosis to a radical psychological revolution. Drawing on an Aristotelian reversal, he argues that humanity must reclaim leisure—not as passive consumption, but as the rigorous pursuit of activities that are intrinsically meaningful. He introduces the effort paradox: the biological reality that human satisfaction requires friction and resistance. To survive the post-work era, we must intentionally reintroduce self-imposed struggle through master-crafts, civic virtues, and aesthetic living.

As the work culminates in the epilogue, the thesis becomes clear: “The end of traditional work shouldn’t mean the end of effort. Instead, it should mean channeling human energy into personal growth, creativity, and self-understanding.”



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