Chess is an unusually poor example. When computers took over Chess, we didn't have something stupid like 30% of employment relying on playing Chess to eat and pay rent.
The analogy only makes sense if you're already convinced that we won't lose the majority of white-collar work to computers.
To those who are not convinced that we are looking at making 50% of the workforce redundant, Chess is an analogy that makes no sense.
It only makes sense if you're already a true believer.
Chess is an unusually poor example. When computers took over Chess, we didn't have something stupid like 30% of employment relying on playing Chess to eat and pay rent.
The analogy only makes sense if you're already convinced that we won't lose the majority of white-collar work to computers.
To those who are not convinced that we are looking at making 50% of the workforce redundant, Chess is an analogy that makes no sense.
It only makes sense if you're already a true believer.