In an age where automation and AI are rapidly replacing human labor, the foundational contract of modern education—study hard, get a degree, find a job—is collapsing. This essay explores how education has become a symbolic system tied to recognition and status rather than real contribution, and why societies filled with highly educated but functionally unemployed individuals are facing a crisis of meaning. Drawing from Eidoist principles, it offers a bold vision for reimagining education in a post-work world: one rooted in presence, contribution, and structural form—not performance or prestige.

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A Capitalist Imperative In capitalist economies, businesses are driven by the imperative to maximize profits. Investing in automation, such as humanoid robots, allows companies to reduce labor costs, increase efficiency, and minimize risks associated with human workers. This trend reflects a broader shift where capital increasingly replaces labor, not necessarily to benefit society at large, but to enhance returns on…

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