Ask HN: Why is everyone in search of peak productivity?
Between coding agents and projects like OpenClaw, so many entrepreneurs, developers and businesses are salivating over the amazing productivity gains they're getting.
Why is "getting more done" so important? Isn't this an opportunity for people to reflect on _why_ they are doing things instead of just how much they can do?
I keep wondering what the ideal future state is for these people? It appears to be a frenzied battalion of agent-FTEs out interacting with other agents, spitting out mediocre thoughts, products and services at break-neck speed.
The obvious answer is that productivity = money, but as a developer myself, the recent acceleration of AI tools has instead made me much more reflective and inclined to step-back, slow down and think rather than rush forward. There's two core Marxist concepts that precisely describe what you're feeling: Tendency of the rate of profit to fall [0] and worker alienation [1]. As AI automates more, the "value" of a single line of code drops. To stay profitable, capitalism forces you into a "frenzied" race to produce massive volume at breakneck speed. You're effectively turned from a craftsman into a manager of machines - alienating you from the actual act of creation. Stepping back to "think" could be argued is nothing less than you being a good Marxist - rebelling against a system that only ever asks "how much" instead of "why". [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tendency_of_the_rate_of_profit... [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marx%27s_theory_of_alienation Thank you. I've never read Marx. Any suggestions on where to start after reading through the links? The Communist Manifesto is the seminal work. It’s fairly short. It's not the best explanation of the actual socioeconomic theory though, it was written more as a political ad, if you will. If you're more interested in the actual theory, I'd recommend Foundations of the Critique of Political Economy [0]. In that book, these are particularly relevant: The introduction This is basically a systems thinking level analysis of the economy and a good primer. The note about machinery, production and capital [1] This talks pretty much exactly about machines increasing productivity, the implications for the worker and even speculates about workers one day just becoming "regulators of automated systems". (2) General relation between production, distribution, exchange and consumption Talks about the mechanisms behind the "frenzy". Heavy on the philosophical theory. [0] https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1857/grundrisse/ [1] https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1857/grundrisse/...