Not by Bread Alone: Career Meaning Beyond Economic Necessity in the Age of AI
Description
Artificial intelligence is rapidly reshaping the structure of work, yet most discussions focus narrowly on job displacement, reskilling, and technological substitution. This paper advances a broader claim: as AI increasingly absorbs instrumental and cognitive labor, the organizing logic of career construction must shift beyond economic necessity toward meaning-centered contribution. The argument proceeds in three stages. First, it traces the historical evolution of career identity from industrial role-stability through knowledge-economy cognitive advantage to the current AI inflection point, establishing that each era’s career model reflected a dominant mode of value creation. Second, it identifies four structural pressures—skill volatility, cognitive offloading, productivity inflation, and identity anxiety—that destabilize productivity-centered career models. Third, it proposes a reframing of career construction around four axes: meaning orientation, relational capital, ethical navigation, and adaptive meta-skills. Drawing on career construction theory (Savickas, 2013), the protean career concept (Hall, 2004), self-determination theory (Deci & Ryan, 2000), and contemporary AI scholarship, the paper introduces the concept of contribution architecture—the structured alignment of personal capacities, technological augmentation, and societal need—as the organizing principle of durable career identity in the AI age. The transition is gradual rather than disruptive, but it requires individuals and institutions to reconceptualize careers not merely as income pathways but as architectures of meaningful contribution. Practical implications for higher education, organizations, and individual professionals are discussed.
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