Merle,
I'm not sure how that questions about "democracy" and questions about
"meritocracy" are necessarily related. If I was to pick a historic example
that most tried to do meritocracy, it would be imperial china, several
hundred years ago. Certainly there was an elite class, but there was also
incredible potential for social mobility because there were state run tests
that allowed people to move into and to move up within the civil service.
Of course such tests favored parents who could afford tutors, etc., but
nobody cared because the function of tutors was to turn kids into more
meritorious adults.

Nick,
I'm not sure we need too much ontological baggage to do the meritocracy
game. What we do need is an agreement about the circumstances that we find
ourselves in... once we get that, we just look for those who are best fit.
;- )

The biggest hindrance I see to the meritocracy game is that ultimately we
will want people with a wide variety of merits (i.e., who exercise skills
well-matched to a variety of circumstances). Of course, I know you agree
with that (and have written about it at some point).








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On Tue, Apr 22, 2014 at 5:38 PM, glen <[email protected]> wrote:

> On 04/22/2014 02:24 PM, Merle Lefkoff wrote:
>
>> Has the list seen this?
>> http://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/princeton-experts-
>> say-us-no-longer-democracy
>>
>> A report coming out of the meritocracy, based on big data sets.  Makes the
>> conversation you're having kind of -- well, what cave do you dwell in?
>>
>
> Heh, there are many people that believe we never were a democracy to begin
> with.  To most other democracies, we seem to have been living in a cave for
> centuries.  Why buck tradition?
>
>
> --
> ⇒⇐ glen
>
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