CONCEPT
The Cheerful Robot
Mills's figure for the human being whose capacity for autonomous thought has been so thoroughly shaped by institutional demands that the capacity has atrophied without the person's awareness — cheerful precisely because the robot does not know it is a robot.
The cheerful robot is Mills's name for the endpoint of a trajectory rather than a type of person. It is what happens when the increasing
rationalization of every facet of life proceeds far
enough that the capacity for
reason — the critical and reflexive thought that questions purposes rather than merely optimizing procedures — has atrophied without producing any
felt sense of loss. The cheerful robot lives in a world of total rationality and zero reason. Every process is optimized. No one asks what the optimization is for. The question Mills posed — not whether we can be turned into robots, but whether we can be made to want to become cheerful and willing ones — remains the question the AI transition has made most acute.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Mills distinguished sharply between rationality (the logic of the system: coordination, control, efficiency, optimization of means toward predetermined