When Work Becomes a Religion
AI may not only disrupt labor markets. It may expose how much modern people have asked work to do for the soul. A recent essay by Sam Lessin argues that AI’s deepest danger is not mainly unemployment, but meaninglessness. The real threat, he suggests, is that AI may automate enough “useful” labor to weaken one of modern society’s central moral stories: that effort leads to contribution, contribution to dignity, and dignity to a life that makes sense. Public debate, in his view, is tracking the wrong metric. Economists measure wages, productivity, and job displacement. Lessin thinks the more consequential question is what happens when people no longer feel needed. “Meaning is not some luxury layer on top of life,” he writes. “It is the critical input.” That diagnosis is sharper than much current AI commentary. We have become accustomed to asking economic questions: How many jobs will be lost? Which sectors will grow? Will abundance increase? Those are real questions. But they are ...