For two centuries the dominant question about technology and work has been which jobs the machine will take. This essay argues the question is the wrong one. Synthesizing the task-based economics of automation (Autor; Acemoglu and Restrepo), the augmentation versus automation distinction (Brynjolfsson), and the philosophy of human work (Polanyi; Arendt), it advances three claims. First, that artificial intelligence rarely replaces a person outright; it dissolves the function a person performs while raising the value of the judgment, accountability, care, and meaning that surround it. Second, that the defining shift of this decade is from supplying labor to directing it: the knowledgeable individual becomes the manager of a small, tireless, nonhuman workforce. The author introduces the term e-mployees for that workforce — artificial agents an individual delegates to, supervises, and remains accountable for — and e-mployer for the human role on the other side. Third, that the capacities which survive and compound are characterological rather than technical, and can be deliberately built (the E-mployee Doctrine). The paper states the conditions under which its argument would fail and whom it does not serve.
Jonah Tebaa (Mon,) studied this question.