Schools are places of learning and it begins in the form of general knowledge in all or most subjects of importance like language, math, science, history, etc. — TheMadFool
if people want a doctor, a qualified and experienced one at that, for their aches and pains, i.e. they look for experts in the problems that concern them, why is it that they don't impose the same exacting standards for their leaders (presidents, senators, governors, etc)? — TheMadFool
I'd first think about why people need a leader at all. What is it about the nature of people in a society which prevents them from simply going about their day-to-day lives without any leader at all? — Isaac
In short we have an ingrained, fully justified, belief that to solve a particular problem we need to consult an expert in that field and to produce such experts we need schools and education programs in those fields. — TheMadFool
To allow the masses to make decisions would be a grave error. Of course this doesn't mean we ignore popular opinion but you did mention good candidates for leaders losing to pop idols and Disney cartoon characters and that really puts a dent in the reliability of the masses to make right choices — TheMadFool
this vindicates my call for good leaders and institutions where they may be trained . — TheMadFool
The belief in personal authority of experts simply turns you into an intellectual have-not. — alcontali
Seriously, in God I trust and in nothing else. — alcontali
Agathon: I'm afraid the word is bad. You have been condemned to death.
Allen: Ah, it saddens me that I should cause debate in the senate.
Agathon: No debate. Unanimous.
Allen: Really?
Agathon: First ballot.
Allen: Hmmm. I had counted on a little more support.
Simmias: The senate is furious over your ideas for a Utopian state.
Allen: I guess I should never have suggested having a philosopher-king.
Simmias: Especially when you kept pointing to yourself and clearing your throat.
— Woody Allen, 'My Apology'
trusting people to a degree is more efficient and certainly a lot nicer — Isaac
When we talk about trustless systems, we mean that our ability to trust it does not depend on the intentions of any particular party, which could be arbitrarily malicious. A trustless system allows you to trust in the system without needing to trust in the parties with which you’re transacting. — Trustless systems
And who told you about God? — Isaac
"Fitra" or "fitrah" (Arabic: فطرة; ALA-LC: fiṭrah), is the state of purity and innocence Muslims believe all humans to be born with. Fitra is an Arabic word that is usually translated as "original disposition," "natural constitution," or "innate nature."[1] According to Islamic theology, human beings are born with an innate inclination of tawhid (Oneness), which is encapsulated in the fitra along with compassion, intelligence, ihsan and all other attributes that embody the concept of humanity.[citation needed] It is for this reason that some Muslims prefer to refer to those who embrace Islam as reverts rather than converts, as it is believed they are returning to a perceived pure state.[2] — Wikipedia on the concept of Fitrah
Simply because the idea of leaders coming from a school and then assuming leadership roles in a Democracy or a Republic goes totally against the idea of a representative democracy.This may be naive thinking on my part but if people want a doctor, a qualified and experienced one at that, for their aches and pains, i.e. they look for experts in the problems that concern them, why is it that they don't impose the same exacting standards for their leaders (presidents, senators, governors, etc)? — TheMadFool
The example of the military shows that a true leadership school works only for very hierarchial organizations where higher level leaders are chosen by a formal process.
Perhaps in academic circles too much is importance is given to the social control aspect of these hierarchies, along the lines of Michel Foucault, and the simple pragmatic reasoning just why things like the military are hierarchial with centralized leadership are sidelined.
Now, if one does a survey of higher learning, there's a degree for every conceivable subject the acquisition of which makes a student qualified and, fingers crossed, highly competent in the given subject. This has the benefit of making such qualified people into experts in their respective fields and thus become people we can put our trust in. — TheMadFool
This belief is deeply ingrained but not at all justified. — alcontali
It is exactly when we trust these people that they will abuse our trust — alcontali
Well, no. You're stuck on two grounds
1. The people doing the teaching and the curriculum itself would be drawn from that very mass we've just concluded can't be trusted. You'd have somehow ensure that the institution was started and maintained by the very quality of person you're saying is lacking as a leader. If we can't find them to make leaders out of, then what makes you think we can find any to do the teaching?
2. Even if you found some people, to install them as either leaders or teachers in an institution requires the consent of the masses. The masses are simply more powerful than any group which might oppose them (hence the election of cartoon characters). So whomever you chose to be teachers you'd be faced either with a rebellion in the school to replace your choice with a more 'popular' one, or a rebellion in government to replace the school-taught options with ones from outside that institution. — Isaac
Simply because the idea of leaders coming from a school and then assuming leadership roles in a Democracy or a Republic goes totally against the idea of a representative democracy. — ssu
Put potential leaders through governance school (even assuming that school would actually teach them anything about governance), and they'll be soundly beaten in the next election by the latest winner of Pop Idol, or a Disney cartoon character. — Isaac
According to the Dunning-Kruger study, intelligence is defined as:
Knowing when you do not know. — alcontali
While a track record of successfully solving problems is a good reason to believe that people are competent, a college degree is the opposite: it is an excellent reason to distrust their ability to do the job. — alcontali
Who do you go to when you get sick? — TheMadFool
Trust that the expert is concerned about your welfare — TheMadFool
I mean if an expert has no interest in your welfare then his knowledge/expertise is of no value to you for it can be withheld or misused. — TheMadFool
Pharma chief defends 400% drug price rise as a ‘moral requirement’. Nostrum Laboratories’ Nirmal Mulye says he is right to charge as much as possible and slams FDA. A pharma executive has defended his decision to raise the price of an antibiotic mixture to more than $2,000 a bottle, arguing there was a “moral requirement to sell the product at the highest price”. — Financial Times on the morality of the pharma oligarchy
for instance we consult not just any doctor but the best among them and the same applies to other areas of knowledge. — TheMadFool
how do you explain the existence of experts (in other fields)? — TheMadFool
This is one of those smart moves the US have ever done, which likely has had a huge effect. 16 million Americans served in WW2 and not to care about them after the war would have been a political, social and even in the long term an economic disaster.The US military absolutely has a vested interest in its soldiers being financially stable and this often a very pertinent issue because you have often young people from lower class backgrounds getting decent, stable paychecks for the first time in their lives. There's much more that could be said about this: The GI bill encouraging college attendance and the VA home loan giving someone the option to purchase a home with 0% down to name a couple. — BitconnectCarlos
I don't know of classics in this field, but usually the field would be called Civil-Military relations. There the military is viewed from another viewpoint than from the military/war fighting viewpoint (as in military history). In some countries this is quite painful if there has been military junta and literally many of the academic people have been jailed and/or shot by the military. You can guess how they view afterwards the military. Another thing is that understanding the military without seeing it from inside can be puzzling and hence the term of Civil-Military culture gap is used often in the US. Only 0,5% of Americans serve in the military and only 22 million (of those living) have served in the military and that is a small minority. Those who served under the Draft are starting to be quite old.I'd be interested to read what academics have said about the military and if you've read that material I'd be interested in hearing it. — BitconnectCarlos
Yes, I agree. The extreme left is hugely incompetent and doesn't understand things. :grin:If you look at the graph there are two peaks - one at the extreme left consisting of the incompetent and one at the right consisting of the highly competent. — TheMadFool
you can search online for people with similar medical conditions and double-check their experience. — alcontali
some doctors will refuse to prescribe Indian generics, even though they are equivalent — alcontali
I just safely assume that these people are lying all the time. — alcontali
If the one who ought to govern simply cannot, then power lies with other people. And do notice that representative democracy doesn't mean that all positions of power are given to representatives of the people. Behind the media focus there are allways the career professional civil servants or people like the military generals. They have gone through the hierarchial system, which hopefully trains and picks the most able people into leadership positions.I found it odd when thinking about the incompetence of many politicians as to why this is the case, for surely it would be the so that if an individual was chosen to govern the state they would be confirmed as able through some rigorous method. — Aristocles
Sure. But usually we can trust that the people are rational and have sound judgement. When the society and the economy performs OK and the people aren't hopeless or extremely divided, democracy works. Yet if there are huge social problems, deep divides and a lack of social cohesion, democracy can easily turn into ugly mob rule.The system of popular vote which forms the backbone of democracy has the potential to fail on its own due to the fact that people will vote for those they like and not those who are good rulers. — Aristocles
And respect your fellow citizens, even if they disagree with you.We must be a thoughtful public which is educated too about wether nonsense is being said by an individual. If we teach people how to be more rational through the greater understanding of the self and make it a place in education then the likelihood of things such as the test I mention above and a more rational society to survive will increase despite human nature. — Aristocles
And you trust the medical websites and search engines to provide you with a statistically viable sample? Why? You've tested them personally have you? Your own lab facitilies and access to controlled trials, remarkable. Assuming they're lying doesn't get you anywhere because it doesn't provide you with the alternative. Presuming everyone is lying just tells you anything you haven't directly tested yourself might be false. Great. Now what? You don't have the facilities to test everything yourself, so what are you going to do now? — Isaac
Don’t Trust Your Doctor. I’m a doctor, so I can say this with a straight face: Don’t trust your doctor. There’s no question in my mind that today most doctors are businessmen first and doctors second. — Dr. Peter Rost
A doctor tells you why you can't trust your doctor again. Your doctor is merely a pawn in a multi-billion dollar industry - while your health and well-being are a poor, distant second. — Doctors are becoming pawns of a system
Never ask the doctor what you should do. Ask him what he would do if he were in your place. You would be surprised at the difference. — Nassim Nicholas Taleb, Antifragile: Things That Gain From Disorder
The system of popular vote which forms the backbone of democracy has the potential to fail on its own due to the fact that people will vote for those they like and not those who are good rulers — Aristocles
As far as I am concerned, it is obvious that there are very good reasons for a healthy distrust of doctors, the pharma oligarchy, and the entire medical industry. — alcontali
what information I trust, is my own choice, and is something that I decide on a case-by-case basis. — alcontali
If western pharmaceutical companies are just out to make money by bumping up prices, then why aren't the Indian ones just out to make money by cutting corners on quality? If the medical journals can't be trusted to print the truth becasue of their biases and their sponsors, then why can those sources you just cited who have biases and revenue streams to consider too? — Isaac
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