Such as creativity, emotional intelligence, leadership/people management, negotiation skills, motor/hand eye coordination, critical thinking skills...
AI might have mastered just about every skill or capability within 10 or 20 years. Some people suspect less.
Your list isn't really just skills but more generally abilities.
Emotional IQ - See the Inflection 2.5 model (Pi).
Creativity - Ask ChatGPT to help you be creative writing poetry and then creating paintings of the poems.
Leadership/management - Claude 3 or GPT4 might be better than the average manager. 70% of my bosses have been barely competent pr!cks though, so I may be biased.
Negotiation is not that complex actually. It's boils down to being willing to walk away. Leading LLMs can be good negotiators already.
Hand-eye coordination - not for every single task, but we have robots that can play ping pong, juggle, catch balls, and solve a Rubik's cube faster than humanely possible.
Critical thinking skills: put the average person off the street against Claude 3 Opus or GPT-4 Turbo and have them take a GRE or similar test. I would bet on the AI.
For your list, we are already there.
I think that "replaced" is not necessarily the best way to think about it though. People still play chess. Or run. Or Jeopardy. We still have plenty of amateur artists that just want to imitate their favorite cartoon or whatever. Even though AI can do all of that better and faster now.
But wait 10 or 20 years. There will be very realistic and fully capable simulations of humans.
You won't be able to replace doctors, because you want someone to say "I'm a doctor and you need this surgery". What will happen is the doctor will get an AI to help him, and then he will rubber stamp the diagnosis. He captures the gains.
Pilots and captains are also one of these. Someone's gotta be responsible for the people on board, even if a computer is already doing everything on a normal day.
Also, things where the point is to be human. Working for rich people in any capacity may fill this role, for the same reason they by watches which cost more than apartments yet keep worse time than a Casio F91W.
[0] I'm also assuming this is more likely to happen after we get a significant number of android robot workers; if it happens before that point, then it may take a year or two for the global economy to shift.
Nurses/MAs for the same reason, but also the fact that I think people in pain/sickness will still want human compassion. Even if AI and Robots may be able to do the job some day, people want to be helped by other people.
Anything in front of a screen is vulnerable
The only profession where I’m 100% confident it’ll survive is the oldest profession
Many of the answers in this thread talk about skills where AI seems unlikely to have any direct sort of impact at all (like plumbing). In my opinion, that could easily end up being technically correct but exactly wrong in spirit (assuming the ultimate goal is to have a good job). It's somewhat likely that AI-augmented or AI-enabled professions become so ludicrously profitable that any other profession becomes barely livable.
Instead of trying to avoid AI it might make more sense to ride the wave. Dive right into some industry that's undergoing upheaval, work for AI-powered startups, learn about the technology, and meet the future head-on.
I don't want to sound too "gung ho", I'm a software engineer who feels like my profession will be radically different in less than 10 years and I'm genuinely worried about staying relevant. But I think "staying relevant" is probably a better strategy than trying to get out of way.
Countering that, in a way, barring major sociocultural shifts, the elite require serfs, so whatever it is that serfs can be made to do which is somehow necessary for perpetuating the power/financial structures which prop up the elites will be "spared" somehow.
Your question seems to assume that there are some kind of practical human capabilities that cannot be automated. This is false.
Anything that is physical and not 100% replicable.
Anything that is interpersonal relationship.
Also quickly grabbing arbitrarily shaped objects from a pile.
Ditto for any kind of writing or communication skills that are counter-cultural in nature. It seems pretty clear that the AIs corporations are creating are pretty aligned with whatever values the powers-that-be have. I don't expect AI to invent the equivalent of punk rock.
I believe emotional intelligence will become a close second. As long as we don't have perfected humanoid robots like in TV series Westworld, people will likely prefer genuine human contact in certain situations (psychologist, therapist, service sector, nursing...)
I can get great furniture at Ikea, but some people build furniture because they love it.
Even before AI there was the issue of being replaced by cheaper labor. AI just happens to be computational cheap labor. Just be better at what you do to avoid being replaced.
Probably one of the most important jobs now is figuring out what the hell the upcoming jobs/activities should auta be.
No industry is safe from this malpractice as long as above is true.
But also teaching. AI might be better at teaching actual subjects, physics, maths, and so on, but a good part of school is socialization beyond the family, and that pretty much requires human teachers/coaches/guides/role-models.
Pornography is doomed, but we're a long way from realistic physical sex robots, AI powered or otherwise.
AI will do the same, if allowed, eventually, to mental jobs
Or maybe I just think that because I still consider myself one. Who knows.
AI is assistance not an replacement to a lot extent
"AI" still can't drive a car.
I think AI can possibly replace lawyers, but the powerful people in society will do all they can to prevent it.
I've come to believe the sacrifice is the thing -- that's why getting on a plane beats the best video conference and always will. The same thing will be true with AI.
Genuine communication will only become more important and those who can communicate well and not sound like LLM drivel (even if it gets really good) will stand out.
So driving for Uber and mowing lawns.
People then assumed that through automation (not even intelligent automation) we would work less and do more interesting things. Boy were they wrong, and I wholeheartedly assume that we'll be wrong again about the next 20 years.
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