No, the MIT study (which was based on information that's 40 years out of date) predicted a "global economic collapse" and not a collapse of the monetary system nor the end of capitalism. Basically a depression.
My fault for lack of proper extrapolation... however, a 'global economic collapse' doesn't really sound like a 'depression'.
In case you hadn't noticed... there won't be any 'recovery' this time around.
Things are rapidly changing in the favor of highly automated future.
How do you expect the current system of 'working for a living' to survive?
Simply speaking: it cannot.
No, that's employing a machine to provide information, you (the Human Being) then utilize that information to make a decision.
You basically repeated what I stated here... however... its' not about 'making' a decision, but instead 'arriving at' decision.
Otherwise known as the end of democracy project.
Very humorous... considering that 'democracy' doesn't even exist in reality.
You are simply provided an illusion that your vote actually matters, all the while people in positions of power are the ones who select your candidates, and those candidates end up doing the bidding of those who provided the funding.
They might give the general populace certain things... but they are miniscule at best, while 98% of their 'promises' end up being unrealized (which seems to repeat itself over and over again).
Shifting away from politics...nature is quite simply speaking a 'dictatorship'.
You can either live in accordance to natural law, or you can go against it (like we are doing right now) and end up making life miserable for everyone, as well as destroy the environment on which Human life depends upon.
Instead of using science and technology for betterment of everyone with a minimal impact on the environment, we use it to destroy the environment while doing little or nothing to repair the damage.
For over 50 years, we had access to technical solutions that would lower the footprint of our species on this planet by orders of magnitude (without curbing down birth rates or killing anyone in the process).
But instead, we go about this planet consuming everything ad infinitum not really caring about 'technical efficiency' and instead allow 'cost efficiency' to tell us how to do things.
For a technologically developed society... that is quite simply moronic.
As you've described it, yes it is computers controlling your life.
Do not attempt to project personal bias into this.
I already explained that in RBE computers simply provide Humans with real-time information on what is happening and that we would test and implement most technically efficient solutions based on that data which would enhance the quality of life for everyone while preserving the environment.
It is the process of the scientific method - nothing more.
Fun fact: your life is currently controlled by greedy idiots who do not know how to solve real life problems and therefore use whatever means at their disposal to keep the general population as docile and ignorant as possible, occupying their attention with frivolous nonsense as well as 'jobs' so they couldn't shit their attention to solving problems.
You also live in a society that creates imaginary laws and regulations which you have to abide by... and if you do not, you end up in jail, or worse.
If using computers for better arrival at decisions and solving problems is your idea of 'control'... then I would personally prefer that to the deranged system we currently have.
Indoctrination of the general public. If you truely advocate people being free thinkers Deks, why is "extensive education" necessary?
If you want to bring everything down to 'indoctrination', then how is capitalism different?
Everything starts from education.
Humans/we are victims of our cultures.
If you do not expose people to relevant general education, critical thinking and problem solving, nor do you encourage them to seek information that even contradicts various things that aren't necessarily 'widely accepted', you end up with people whose perceptions are extremely narrow and don't have the capacity for 'looking at the bigger picture'.
By limiting information and critical thinking, you effectively make people more susceptible to being manipulated and used by others - or in short... exactly what is happening right now (and has been happening for a long time now).
I'm hardly advocating 'indoctrination' - because that implies I would tell people how to think and lead their lives.
I advocate exposing people to a broad spectrum of information, critical thinking and problem solving and encourage use of the scientific method to solve problems (because, to date, the scientific method demonstrated actual reliability in actually solving real problems).
The writers on TNG repeatedly asked Roddenberry to describe how his economy system supposedly work, so the information could be incorporated into scripts. Roddenberry couldn't tell them because he didn't understand it either.
It was just a vague idea with no substance.
Which again doesn't support the notion that Roddenberry was 'losing his mind' as some people seem to infer.
It is my understanding that Gene Roddenberry got his 'inspiration' of the Federation economic system from Jacque Fresco's idea of a resource based economy (he had various sessions in the past which apparently Roddenberry attended).
As for Gene's inability on explaining it... that's a rather simple one: he might not have understood the concept of RBE properly to explain it in detail, or he did manage to get some of the basics, but not enough again to extrapolate the details.
Those who asked him about it might have lacked the necessary information and context to understand it themselves, or they might just not have liked it because it clashed too much with how our world currently works (which is why they might have decided to fill in the holes by projecting various current day aspects into the show and its time-frame).
This is why I said the Federation in the 24th century seems to have incorporated various aspect of RBE, however, it wasn't all the way there (it was effectively 'stuck' in a transition period).
Some of the writers who came after Roddenberry probably weren't aware of Cybernation or RBE as a concept... while others might have, so we saw odd mixtures that seemingly contradicted one another at times.
Even today, just how many ST writers are aware of RBE or TVP?
Grasping the concepts of RBE/TVP in detail can take time.
It even took me well over a year of studying the necessary materials to gain the level of understanding I have right now (but I do not pretend to understand all of it... not by a long shot).
Roddenberry might not have had easy access to such materials at the time like we have today.
At best, he might have attended a few lectures that Fresco had, but even with that, it would depend on what the lectures covered, to what extent... and how much of it Gene Roddenberry actually understood.
As far as I'm aware... his original idea about the Enterprise-D exploring other galaxies in the 24th century was apparently rejected by the network or someone else because it (along with a radically different socio-cultural idea) seemed that the audiences wouldn't be able to 'relate' with it.
That premise actually fits extraordinarily well into the concept of exponential technological development.
What we ended up seeing on TV however didn't go much further from where TOS was.