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Do you think relying on cooking robots cause people to forget how to cook?
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| 12/7/2025
| CharlesOconnell
Posted on 12/07/2025 1:42:12 PM PST by CharlesOConnell
Cooking Robots and the Loss of Human Skill
Original Question
In view of centuries of history of technological development in which increasing power and convenience of gadgetry have prompted the unintended consequence of the atrophy of first-person practice of human skills with self-reliance, what is the likelihood that the proliferation of cooking robots will result in people forgetting how to cook and feed themselves in the event of a technological contraction?
Short Answer
The risk is real but uneven. Widespread cooking robots would almost certainly erode everyday cooking skills in some parts of the population, especially among those who fully outsource meal preparation. But it is unlikely that humans as a whole would “forget how to cook.” Instead, cooking would probably become more stratified: a minority would still practice and teach it (by choice, culture, or necessity), while a significant portion would become quite helpless if the technology failed. The danger is less a total loss of knowledge and more a dangerous concentration of practical skill in fewer hands.
1. Historical Pattern: Technology & Skill Atrophy
We already have many precedents for your concern:
- Navigation: GPS has sharply reduced people’s ability (and willingness) to navigate by map, landmarks, and memory.
- Arithmetic: Calculators and spreadsheets mean many people are weak at mental arithmetic or basic estimation.
- Handwriting & spelling: Keyboards and autocorrect have eroded cursive writing and spelling skills.
- DIY repairs and maintenance: Consumer appliances are more complex and less fixable; people call specialists instead of repairing themselves.
In each case, the skill did not disappear entirely, but it became rarer, more specialized, and in many contexts socially unnecessary. The same pattern would likely apply to cooking in a robot-heavy world.
2. What Cooking Robots Would Actually Change
Cooking is not a single skill but a bundle of abilities:
- Planning meals and purchasing ingredients.
- Basic techniques (boiling, frying, baking, chopping, seasoning).
- Food safety and hygiene (storage, cooking temperatures, spoilage recognition).
- Improvization and substitution when ingredients or tools are missing.
A mature cooking-robot ecosystem would tend to remove the need for most of the above for people who fully adopt it:
- Robots + apps could plan meals and order groceries automatically.
- Machines handle heat control, timing, chopping, and mixing.
- Sensors and software handle food safety decisions.
If a system like that works reliably for years, many users will never need to form the underlying skills at all. For a teenager growing up in such a home, “cooking” might mean “telling the system what I feel like eating.”
3. Why Total Forgetting Is Unlikely
Despite that, there are strong forces that prevent complete civilizational amnesia:
- Cultural and aesthetic value: Cooking is an art as well as a necessity. There will always be people (chefs, hobbyists, traditional communities) who cook because they enjoy it, or because their culture attaches meaning to preparing food by hand.
- Economic and geographic variation: Even if robots become common in wealthy urban households, many regions and income levels will continue to cook manually for cost reasons or lack of infrastructure.
- Institutional memory: Culinary schools, restaurants, and even military or disaster-response organizations will maintain cooking skills as part of their institutional competence.
- Documentation and media: Cookbooks, videos, and online resources will preserve the “how,” even if fewer people practice it daily. Skills may be rusty but can be relearned.
So the danger is not that humanity literally loses the concept and knowledge of cooking, but that many individuals and communities will have no lived practice and therefore no resilience when technology fails.
4. Technological Contraction: Who Is Vulnerable?
In a technological contraction (long power outages, supply-chain collapse, war, major economic breakdown), the impact would be very uneven:
- Most vulnerable: Individuals and regions that:
- Depend almost entirely on automated systems for food preparation.
- Live in environments where raw ingredients are normally pre-processed for machines (e.g., cartridge-style food packs).
- Have little or no practice in using basic tools (knife, pan, pot, open flame, simple stove).
- More resilient: Communities that:
- Still cook daily or weekly from raw ingredients.
- Maintain gardening, preserving, or hunting/fishing traditions.
- Have institutional routines involving manual cooking (schools, religious communities, rural families).
In other words, cooking robots would probably widen the gap: those who maintain traditional skills become relatively more resilient; those who rely fully on automation become dramatically less so.
5. Likelihood: Qualitative Assessment
If we phrase your question as several more precise ones, we can answer them separately:
- Will a significant share of people in advanced economies lose basic cooking competence if cooking robots proliferate?
Very likely, yes. History suggests that when a technology reliably performs a task, many users stop learning or maintaining the underlying skill. - Will cooking skills vanish from society as a whole?
Very unlikely. Skills will persist in subcultures, professions, and poorer or more traditional regions. Human societies rarely lose such fundamental crafts completely; they become niche. - In a severe technological contraction, would many people be unable to feed themselves competently without machines?
Quite likely, especially in places that have fully integrated cooking robots and where food systems are tightly coupled to automation (special cartridges, pre-portioned robot-compatible packs, etc.).
So the “likelihood” is high for widespread personal helplessness in some strata of society, low for absolute civilizational forgetting.
6. What Actually Matters: Distribution of Skills
A crucial subtlety: resilience is not about whether everyone can cook, but whether enough people in each community can cook, and can teach others quickly.
- If skills are broadly distributed, a crisis leads to awkward improvisation but not mass helplessness.
- If skills are highly centralized (only professionals, or only certain classes), crisis can produce local famine and chaos even if the knowledge exists elsewhere.
Cooking robots tend to centralize skill in manufacturers and a small group of enthusiasts. That centralization is the real risk in a technological contraction.
7. Possible Countermeasures
Without rejecting technology, societies could reduce the risk in simple ways:
- Keep basic cooking as a standard part of school education.
- Promote cooking as a cultural, social, or religious practice, not merely a chore.
- Design robots and devices that teach cooking as they assist, rather than fully replacing human decision-making.
- Encourage community events (cookouts, potlucks, cultural festivals) where real cooking is practiced and shared.
These approaches don’t stop technological convenience, but they preserve a baseline of human competence that can be activated if needed.
8. Overall Conclusion
The proliferation of cooking robots would almost certainly lead many individuals to lose practical, first-person experience in cooking, and therefore leave them vulnerable in any serious technological contraction. However, given the cultural, economic, and institutional variety of human societies, it is unlikely that cooking as a skill or body of knowledge would vanish completely.
The deeper question, then, is not whether cooking robots will make us collectively forget how to cook, but whether we will choose to maintain enough living practice of basic skills to remain resilient when our machines falter.
TOPICS: Business/Economy; Computers/Internet; Health/Medicine; History
KEYWORDS: aislop; robot; robots
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To: CharlesOConnell
I think your AI generated BS is nonsense.
41
posted on
12/07/2025 4:11:08 PM PST
by
Harmless Teddy Bear
(It's like somebody just put the Constitution up on a wall …. and shot the First Amendment -Mike Rowe)
To: Mr. Blond; CharlesOConnell
An article written by AI...
Is that why the thread title has a subject-verb mismatch?
42
posted on
12/07/2025 4:55:11 PM PST
by
nicollo
(Trump beat the cheat! )
To: All
I tried cooking robots a few times.
Never could get them tender enough to eat, no matter how long I boiled ‘em.
To: LegendHasIt
You just need the right sauce.😮
44
posted on
12/07/2025 5:49:17 PM PST
by
MomwithHope
(Forever grateful to all our patriots, past, present and future.)
To: CharlesOConnell
Of course. Handwriting, as another example, has suffered since we have been using keyboards. Schools are not even teaching cursive any more. I’m appalled when I sit down to write a little note inside a birthday card.
45
posted on
12/07/2025 6:34:07 PM PST
by
Albion Wilde
(To live free is the greatest gift; to die free is the greatest victory. —Erica Kirk)
To: MomwithHope
Any Suggestions as to what sauce?
;-)
To: CharlesOConnell
I forgot how to make my own shoes and heat my home with wood from trees I cut down too... So what? If I need to make shoes or learn to cook I'll google the system and learn how.
47
posted on
12/07/2025 8:27:14 PM PST
by
GOPJ
(Soros & democrats back criminals, dope dealers, illegals & terrorists. <P><I><B><big><center></B>)
To: AdmSmith; AnonymousConservative; Arthur Wildfire! March; Berosus; Bockscar; BraveMan; cardinal4; ...
48
posted on
12/07/2025 9:22:59 PM PST
by
SunkenCiv
(Kudos to the Admin Moderator, reason: "Randspam" [ 4354167 ])
To: CharlesOConnell
To any Gen Z men out there. Learn to cook. Even the most basic cooking skills will seduce the babes. Double plus good that home made meals are 1/4 the cost of eat out. Of free....l
49
posted on
12/08/2025 12:13:11 AM PST
by
Organic Panic
('Was I molested. I think so' - Ashley Biden in response to her father joining her in the shower)
To: tumblindice
I worked on an automation project to trim and cut onions. Most difficult project I ever worked on and we still never got it right.
50
posted on
12/08/2025 12:17:14 AM PST
by
Organic Panic
('Was I molested. I think so' - Ashley Biden in response to her father joining her in the shower)
To: stanne
2 plus 2 = whatever big brother says it is.
51
posted on
12/08/2025 12:18:26 AM PST
by
Organic Panic
('Was I molested. I think so' - Ashley Biden in response to her father joining her in the shower)
To: stanne
I’m an old fart. I learned math before there were calculators. Probably better off for it. First calculator I bought was for converting hexadecimal to decimal, and vice-versa when I was an assembler programmer. I could do it with pencil and paper, but that took too much time on the job.
To: Organic Panic
Cheaper, better tasting and better for you. And you’re right, the babes love to be pampered with a very nice meal. Even my wife.
To: LegendHasIt
54
posted on
12/08/2025 3:26:08 AM PST
by
MomwithHope
(Forever grateful to all our patriots, past, present and future.)
To: CharlesOConnell
Asked Grok, “Are cooking robots a real thing and widespread in use?”
Grok:
Cooking robots are not yet widespread in use as of late 2025. They remain an emerging technology, primarily adopted in niche commercial settings like fast-food chains and high-end restaurants to address labor shortages and efficiency needs, while household penetration is minimal due to high costs (often $1,000–$5,000 per unit) and limited awareness.
55
posted on
12/08/2025 6:54:15 AM PST
by
Alas Babylon!
(They don't kill you because you're a Nazi, they call you a Nazi so they can kill you.--CFW)
To: CharlesOConnell
People to forget how to cook?
Not all
Fire check
Meat check
Stick check
Full check
56
posted on
12/08/2025 7:08:14 AM PST
by
Vaduz
(?.)
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