▲ | steveBK123 4 days ago | |||||||||||||
Elite overproduction is an interesting topic and putting aside any suggestion that it's a precise mathematical predictor, it obviously creates societal problems. That is - you've created a large class of intelligent achievers with nothing for them to do. Arguably that just naturally produces increasing societal upheaval. Whether that means revolution or just chaotic increasingly populist elections is a matter of degrees. | ||||||||||||||
▲ | matthewdgreen 4 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||
There is always something for a large class of intelligent achievers to do. The failure to put them to work is more of a societal failure than it is an indictment of the education system. (Maybe AI will change this, but only in the same way that it changes every part of our societal model.) | ||||||||||||||
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▲ | username332211 4 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||
Can you name some examples? Virtually every major revolution or civil war I can think of, would involve intelligent achievers who've made it. In fact, the core of the rebellion would be a class that's often vital for the exercise for political power, but won't be allowed access to that same power. English gentry, New England merchants, nobles of the robe, army officers, etc. Only the Russian revolution would involve people who were nobodies before it, but they took charge after the disaffected elites that came to power in February spend most of 1917 undermining each other. | ||||||||||||||
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