Tuesday, July 30, 2013
Why Aren't the Best People in Charge?
By Tom Kando
Aristocracy: (ar/I stokrə sē): Rule by the best. From the Greek aristos (αριστος) : the best, and krátos (κρατος): force, or power.
Ancient Greek philosophers advocated that society should be governed by the best people. These philosophers included Aristotle, Socrates and especially Plato, whose “Republic” is an attempt to actually describe such an effort, and who even went to Syracuse in the hope of founding the ideal society.
So who are the best?
Plato and some others felt that they are the philosophers, who therefore should be in charge. Philosophy’s claim to the throne is that philosophy can be defined as the search for the truth. Philosophers have a better chance of knowing the truth than other people do. They are wiser. On that basis, they should rule.
Twenty-two centuries later, Auguste Comte (1798-1857), the founder of Sociology, argued that society should be ruled by sociologists. In the 19th century, Sociology was not very different from philosophy, so what Comte was saying wasn’t very different from Plato.
However, the thing about philosophy (and 19th century sociology) is that they are DEDUCTIVE. They believe that the truth can be discovered through logic, through THINKING. For a long time, philosophy was by far our best hope to discover the truth (as opposed, for example, to “faith”).
But a couple of hundred years ago, a more advanced method to discover the truth arose: Science. Science added INDUCTION to what philosophy had been doing. It said that in addition to thinking, we also need to OBSERVE. It added empiricism. This one-two punch greatly improved our chance of discovering the truth.
Deductive reasoning is very nice, but it can also lead to trouble, as demonstrated by some of the nonsense produced by medieval scholasticism, even brilliant men such as Thomas Aquinas.
For example, take one of Aquinas’ five ways to prove God’s existence - his “argument from design:” We see that natural bodies work toward some goal, and do not do so by chance. Most natural things lack knowledge. But as an arrow reaches its target because it is directed by an archer, what lacks intelligence achieves goals by being directed by something intelligent. Therefore some intelligent being exists by whom all natural things are directed to their end; and this being we call God.
Of course, this is basically the “intelligent design” argument, to which millions of people still subscribe today. However, Darwinian science clearly refutes this argument.
So, whereas until the 19th century - from Socrates to Nietzsche - my vote would have gone to Plato, I now feel that the people in charge should not be philosophers, but SCIENTISTS.
In other words, I feel that society should be ruled by university professors. For example, I am very happy that we elected professor Barack Obama. We need scientific minds to be in charge, people like Albert Einstein and science officer Spock. Actually, President Obama reminds me of Spock (even his ears). And don’t forget nerds! Bill Gates also has my vote.
* * * * *
The expression is “Brain vs. Brawn.” Ideally, brain should triumph over brawn. But in reality, it hasn’t. Historically, society has NOT been ruled by the best.
Take gender: On balance, women are probably better than men. They are less violent, less destructive, less murderous, less suicidal. They are built better, they live longer, have less testosterone. They are more moral, more nurturing, more cooperative. They would seem to possess greater survival characteristics. Women are Prius, or Honda, or Volkswagen. Men are Chevrolet Camaro (I know, Chevrolet recently made an impressive come-back as a quality car. But I’m talking about the stereotypical Chevrolet, one of the worst cars over the past 50 years).
Women could probably be better scientists, better artists, better leaders than men. But they haven’t been permitted to do so.
Another example: In ancient Rome and elsewhere, many of the smartest, most educated, most sophisticated people were slaves (many of them were Greeks). Their masters were brutes - rich brutes, military brutes. People like Crassus. Filthy rich generals.
Or take Jews: Their contribution to art, science and knowledge is so disproportionate that it is difficult not to think of them as simply superior to the rest of us. Yet, they have been the victims of oppression and genocide more than any other group.
So it’s brawn which has been mostly in power, not brain.
Today? Are the members of the capitalist ruling class smarter and more talented than those over whom they rule? Of course not. Aristocracy does not exist. leave comment here
20 comments:
"I would rather be governed by the first two thousand people in the Boston telephone directory than by the two thousand people on the faculty of Harvard University." - William Buckley - Meet the Press (1965)
I am familiar with this famous and witty Buckley quote. He makes a good point - as I do, in my post.
The best people aren't put in charge because the system doesn't allow them to be. The system is dominated by two political parties controlled by money. The people in office are those that will steer the money to the lobbyists. It has nothing to do with intelligence, whether it be faith-based, philosophy-based, or science-based. While one could argue that these groups have different grasps of truth, they all have some idea of a good society that, if implemented, would be better than having a country run by party patsies--in other words theives.
The problem with this logic is that it fails to make a clear connection between best and professors. Don't get me wrong, some of my best friends are professors.
But notice how Philosophers (even those with thoughts as flawed as Plato's) want to be in charge. Or the Sociologists then want to be in charge. Why is it that Philosophers never want the Economists to be in charge. That sounds a lot like a hammer in search of a nail....
What concerns me here are the generalizations. Is philosophy only deductive and science only inductive? The best of both fields use both kinds of reasoning.
Women are better than men? On what scale - on the narrow units you describe? Are there other qualities where women are worse than men? Of course. Different does not mean better.
I would go back and read Aquinas - I think you grossly over simplify. Darwinian logic - much of it is theology not science - does not refute Aquinas at all.
Finally, you prove the error of your logic entirely when you mention that a) Obama was a professor - he was a part time lecturer; b) that Bill Gates would be a good leader - how has Microsoft done in the last couple of decades compared to more competently run corporations - the Zune, the Surface, all the iterations of their lousy software?;
Hey Tom, this was really great. Really informative and entertaining. Congratulations.
Tom
Your brain is getting soft. It's a long standing principle that power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely, whether it's scientists, philosophers, or any other group. Profs are no different - if anything, they are worse. Remember trahison des clercs. There's a lot to be said for tradition.
I am honored to be taken so seriously - by several professors, too!
Gordon, as usual, responds with an impeccably correct answer.
Don’s words are music to my ears.
As to Jonathan, he makes a slight error of misreading: I said precisely that science is a one-two induction-deduction punch, which is why it is so effective.
Regarding the inclusion of economists among the rulers: sure, let’s have an interdisciplinary government, by all means (although there have already been a lot of economists in charge, and some of them have made an awful mess of things. Cf. Greenspan! Maybe it’s time give sociologists a turn).
No, Mark, my brain is not getting soft. I am very grateful that you guys react at all. Jonathan even responds to my funny off-the-cuff remarks about who is “better” (men or women, philosophers or scientists, professors or warriors, etc).
Now don’t misunderstand me, I am not just joking and playing games with you guys. I DO believe that some of my diatribes are interesting and thought-provoking.
But I could also have added this to my post: I want professors to be in charge because I am a professor, and I would especially like to see sociology professors in charge, because I am a sociology professor. Is that transparent enough?
Clearly, to do justice to the question of who should be in charge, the entire field of Political Science and thousands of books written over thousands of years have not yet been able to solve that question.
Obama - "If I had a son he would look like Shaaliver Douse"
Tom,
A perusal of history who might be the best person "to be in charge" may indicate it is neither an abundance of brain nor brawn. Some of the most highly regarded "chiefs" were not endowed with a lot of either. However, they had the good sense (wisdom) to know they were not
devine and had advisors who were allowed to tell them the truth.
Examples of the wise: Elizabeth I, Franklin Roosevelt ("brain trust"),
Harry Truman.
Examples of the unwise: Charles I, Lyndon Johnson, Woodrow Wilson
(Wilson fired his only confidant, Colonel House, in the middle of negotiations at Versailles in 1919)
To anonymous:
Shaaliver Douse, Trayvon Martin, or hundred others.
Tom W.'s examples are good!
I'm not sure scientists make the best decision makers. Running a society is more akin to general of an army than the research & development in a lab. In other words going into a strategic global battle be it military, economic or political I'd take Eisenhower over Einstein every time. Nobody wants college professors in general leading the troops into the jungle, better a wrong decision now than the perfect one tomorrow.
Thanks for your comments, Roy.
If you look at some of the comments and some of my responses, above, you'll see that a certain percentage of this discussion is a bit tongue-in-cheek, even though I AM serious about my claim that human groups rarely put the best possible people in charge.
Obviously, which profession should be asked to provide leadership depends on the challenge at hand: When I am sick, I rely on a doctor. When I crave for a good meal, I rely on my wife or on the chef of a good restaurant. So yes, by all means, if we want to win a military battle, we are better off relying on a general than on a professor... etc, etc.
“In other words, I feel that society should be ruled by university professors. For example, I am very happy that we elected professor Barack Obama.”
He is a buffoon. He went out on a limb twice saying that the use of WMD crossed a red line. He and his delegates have announced the limitations of their potential objectives and the nature of their proposed attack and targets, thereby allowing Syria to disburse any threatened assets and mitigate the potential damage. And now, because of his failure to lead and solidify his alliance, the Brits have dropped out. What is he going to do if he doesn’t get Congressional approval? And worse, if the Congress is smart and doesn’t vote but expresses no confidence, what is he going to do by himself? What a loser!
When Iran weaponizes their nuclear capabilities, how seriously can they treat any of Obama’s red lines. Bye bye Israel.
Wouldn’t have happened under a C+ student like Bush! He got Congressional and UN approval and 40+ allies!
A week later, it continues. What a PUTZ we have for president!
Just saw the perfect encapsulation of the Syrian situation from Peggy Noonan : "What are the American people thinking? Probably some variation of: Wrong time, wrong place, wrong plan, wrong man. " Ah yes, the wrong man - the buffoon.
Peggy Noonan's analysis of the Syrian situation misses the point. Everyone seems to forget about the international agreement against the use of chemical weapons which dates back to 1925.
Where is the support for this agreement? Obama seems to be the only head of state who takes this agreement seriously and he gets crucified for it internationally and at home.
Our war-weariness notwithstanding, Obama's decision is the right one if we want to move in the direction of a more civilized world.
Not questioning the decision. The point is this buffoon's incompetence in implementing the decision
Madeleine's comment is very articulate.I have a different focus - I agree that Obama is morally right, but pragmatically not. I feel that America has enough problems. We have been the world's policeman long enough. Let someone else take on that role for a while.
“In other words, I feel that society should be ruled by university professors. For example, I am very happy that we elected professor Barack Obama.”
I see the non-academic Putin and Assad have outwitted our professorial buffoon again.
To the latest anonymous:
Actually, things are looking pretty good for Obama right now...We don't know yet how the messy and complicated Syrian (and Iranian) situation will end, but so far, developments are positive. You can use words like "buffoon" all you want, but that doesn't make it so. So far, our Professor/President is doing just fine (as did the only other Professor in the White House - Woodrow Wilson, by the way...)
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