So then, not so much a question to be asked, but a strong sense of curiosity comes to me that I felt necessary to investigate. Where was the point at which the "digital" which rings in our most current fears and the "replacing mankind" vibe that follows throughout history first intersect? This is perhaps a murky question to ask, but one part which stood out to me was the development of the Jacquard Loom.

Hardly out of the 17th century, the loom made its appearance in 1801. That is to say, a power loom which through the use of interchangeable punch cards could create detailed and complex patterns during weaving. If you know anything about early computing and the development of digital technology, those "punch cards" might sound a bit familiar, but the shocking bit of it was when it was invented. It's necessity derived from a growing desire for luxury and detailed textiles, which at the time were hard to come by and offered little variety due to exclusivity and price. The Jacquard Loom brought to the forefront textiles which were cheaper to produce and more detailed at the same time, offering precision impossible in technology prior to it.
And just like it's descendants and relatives, it got quite the lash-back in its time. There are accounts on workers destroying Jacquard Looms and even attacking the inventor Joseph Jacquard himself. Many industrialists were thrilled with it's invention, seeing a brave new world to expand into as the need for accessible luxury only grew. But this was a small selection of people out of a much wider set. Echoing fears of wage cuts, personnel cuts, the ever impending robot usurpation of man.
Of course, none of that happened, and in general employment rates rose rather than fell. And if ever we needed to pay attention to history, it seems to me that we need to pay attention to it when it sounds a little bit too much like how we're acting today.
Works referenced
http://www.computersciencelab.com/ComputerHistory/HistoryPt2.htm
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/computinghistory/jacquard.html
Works referenced
http://www.computersciencelab.com/ComputerHistory/HistoryPt2.htm
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/computinghistory/jacquard.html
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