What is America doing at the moment? You've got gifted programs being abandoned. You've got SATs being abandoned for university entrance. Boston Latin, which has used to select people on the basis of examinations, is ceasing to do so and is now accepting people on the basis of lotteries, the same with Lowell High School in San Francisco. You've got these books like Michael Sandel and Markovitz's book attacking the principle of meritocracy. At the same time that you've got this sort of rather plutocratic Ivy League system. So you're getting the ladder and then you've got the attacks on the elite schools in New York. So you've got the ladder being just pulled down on the one hand and you've got a sort of woke plutocratic elites on the one hand enjoying the fruits of all this education, this vast dairies that the education system has. But on the other hand, not really being willing to reach out, which is what a meritocracy should be about to the best talented groups in the whole of society. I think that means ultimately the America loses and China wins, which is not something I want to see.
Hello everyone. I'm pleased today to have as my guest Dr. Adrian Woolridge. Dr. Woolridge was born in 1959 and educated at Baliel College, Oxford, where he took a first in modern history. And all souls college where he held a prize fellowship and was awarded a D. Phil. His thesis was published as Measuring the Mind. He's worked for the Economist magazine since 1988, including as West Coast Bureau Chief, Washington Bureau Chief, an author of the Lexington Column, Management Editor, and author of the Shumpeter Column, and Political Editor, an author of the Beijhard Column. He's the author or co-author of 10 books, including The Right Nation, Conservative Power in America with John Micklethwaite, Capitalism in America with Ellen Greenspan. His most recent book, which I recently read, is The Aristocracy of Talent, How Maritocracy Made the Modern World. I've rarely researched or been able to talk with someone who has so many interests that dovetail with mine, and very much looking forward to this conversation.
So you published this Aristocracy of Talent, and it's the continuance of an interest that you've held for a long time. How has the book been received? Well, I'm glad to say that the book has been extremely well received in Britain. It's been reviewed by all the leading periodicals on both the left and the right, and has been widely discussed on the radio and in various media outlets. In the United States, the reception has been much more muted, I would say. It hasn't been discussed anywhere near as widely, although there is discussion going on and it's beginning to mount a bit. But what most irksmies, it hasn't been reviewed by The New York Times. All the major publications in this country, by this country, I'm in Britain where I'm sitting now, reviewed it. The New York Times hasn't reviewed it. The New York View Books hasn't reviewed it. A lot of the mainstream, particularly liberal publications reviewed it here in Britain, all the liberal publications reviewed it. And I thought, I expected to be more criticized than I was by the liberal publications. It was a sense in many liberal publications that this is an idea that we should grapple with and we shouldn't dismiss out of hand. I was very pleased by the reception both on the left and the right. For example, The New States been wrote along and positive review of it. So for The New York Times, not to have mentioned it at all, well, we all want to be reviewed by The New York Times because it's a big and important newspaper. But for them not to mention it at all, the New York Review Books, not to mention it at all, The New Yorker, all of these outlets. I was disappointed by that just as I was extremely encouraged and pleased by the breadth of the reception in the United Kingdom.
Well, it seems to me to be a reflection of exactly what you're writing about in the book itself. I mean, you traverse the history of the idea of meritocracy and the practice of meritocracy. Also contrasting it with forms of social organization that weren't meritocratic, either implicitly or explicitly. And you talk about the revolt against the idea of meritocracy, especially on the left and the increasing potency, let's say, politically and psychologically of that, rebellion. Interestingly enough, also pointing out that at least at certain times in the 20th century, the meritocratic idea was fundamentally progressive and maybe was in its essence. So maybe I'd like to know from you, you did your thesis, your doctoral thesis, on measuring the mind, the history of that. And this has been a concern of yours for an extraordinary long time. And I'd like to know what's at the bottom of that.
Sure. I wrote, I did a D fill in history at Oxford University and my D fill was on the history of IQ testing and particularly the way the history of IQ testing, the way that IQ testing shaped educational policy because we had something called the 11 plus examination in Britain, which all people in the state sector had to sit and which determined whether they went to grammar schools or secondary modern schools, I elite academic schools or non elite schools, and which was essentially an IQ test or a set of IQ tests.
It's an extraordinary example of the massive public impact of a set of ideas about what constitutes mental ability and how you test that mental ability. So I was interested in that partly because I was myself a product of a grammar school and I went to Oxford having been to a grammar school and my entire educational career was determined by sitting this examination at the age of 11 and passing this examination and passing subsequent examinations.
So it was a sort of a personal thing to me, but it also struck me as a very just thing that somebody from my background, which is a very ordinary background, could go to a really first rate academic school and get an education, it was comparable to people like Boris Johnson, people who went to eat in or Winchester, and so it always struck me that this examination, this way of organizing educational opportunity was a very intriguing thing.
It was something that was subversive of the status quo, which was embodied in my mind by the private schools, the independent schools, and then the labor government, which I naturally sort of gravitated towards and supported, came along and destroyed the grammar schools and they abolished them in the name of comprehensive schools and in the name of getting rid of testing and selection and streaming and things like that.
And it struck me as a young person. This was an extraordinary thing for a supposedly progressive party to be doing and it disillusioned me with the first thing, many other things did subsequently, but it's the first thing that really disillusioned me with the socialist or the labor project.
So I got interested in the history of how this came to be, how the 11 plus came to reshape education in Britain and how these ideas were first accepted and then rejected. And I discovered, I think, that most people in the history faculty at Oxford, which was a fairly conventional conservative faculty, thought I was completely mad to be looking at this subject. And I found myself in the strange position of being somebody who was looking at an unconventional subject, not political history or constitutional history, which was an unconventional subject, which would have put me in the camp of some sort of deranged lefty, but actually from quite a conservative direction because I thought that dismantling the 11 plus and dismantling the grammar schools was a terrible thing.
So I was intellectually quite homeless, but actually being intellectually homeless, I think it's quite appropriate to somebody who's interested in meritocracy, which ultimately I think is an idea which in political terms tends to be intellectually homeless.
So you do point out in the book, you're the phrase in your book, you say cruel meritocracy, cruelty, meritocracy, I believe, and you are referring there despite the fact that you were a beneficiary of the 11 plus system, that the test, it's a really sharp fork in the road. And perhaps it's too sharp a fork in the road in some sense to be palatable.
And then I suppose the people who have dismantled those systems would object to your support for that system by saying, well, it allowed you through, and that was good for you, but there was all those other people who were arbitrarily denied the possibility of advancement. And I think the weak part of that argument is the idea that it's arbitrary, right? That's the crux of the matter.
What exactly does arbitrary mean? And you might also say that cruel as these examinations were, they were perhaps less cruel than what they prevented.
“任意”的确切意思是什么?而你也可能会说,尽管这些考试很残酷,但它们可能比它们所阻止的更残酷。”
Absolutely. Absolutely, I wouldn't advocate for a return to the 11 plus. I think it was a system which was too much a matter of dividing people into sheep and goats. It was too once and for all.
I think you have to have some sort of recourse to what happens if people have a bad day. And I would want a system in which you have a very negated set of selective schools, lots of second chances, lots of different types of schools.
But I think there's a distinction between sort of a system which is short sharp and therefore obviously cruel and a system which is very prolonged seems to be very kind and actually ends up being quite cruel. And I would say that what we've done is replace a system whereby you have one-off test which can benefit a large number of poorer people with a system of very prolonged educational selection which over a long period of time tends to be very biased towards people who have the resources to keep going through.
the system. So under the 11 plus you have a number of people who would be selected as 11 would get a very good academic education, would get free educations at Oxford, Cambridge or whatever university they went to and then would go on to the fast stream of the civil service. Now where you have a much more prolonged system it's easier for people who don't have a lot of resources to be weeded out or to drop out.
And so it costs a lot of money to go to university. It costs a lot of money to go to graduate school by prolonging the process of selection. It looks kinder on the surface but deep down it can be a system which is much more socially biased towards richer people rather than people who might be deserving on the basis of their innate solutions.
You see the same conundrum emerging to some degree with the use of statistically valid and reliable tests to do selection in the workplace. Yes. I mean they have an error so some people are going to be forbidden advancement as a consequence of that test because of error. But, and that's obviously unfortunate and it's particularly unfortunate for them. But placing someone in a position where the probability that they'll succeed over time is extremely low and then tormenting them to death over a one year period while they fail dreadfully and also burdening the company let's say with the fact of dealing with someone in a management position for the sake of argument who actually isn't competent to do that doesn't strike me as a particularly just or empathic solution.
And you know part of the problem here is that, and this is I think part of the problem that we're facing as a society in general with the use of let's say intelligent test, intelligence test is they are the most powerful technology that's research psychologists have ever invented by a large margin. And so if we equated them in some metaphoric sense to surgery we might say well you don't want, surgery might be necessary but you don't want to do it without an anesthetic and you also want to be aware that the scalpel can kill.
And so I think partly what we're wrestling with is the among many other things is the fact that these tests are of incredible power in terms of their predictive ability and we're not exactly sure what to do with that. I mean when I started familiarizing myself with the IQ literature it was actually quite disheartening in some sense because I started to understand just how broad the ability range among human beings is and how intractable that is in some measures in the lower let's say 10th.
So one stat I came across at one point and you detailed the use of IQ tests by the American military they were picked up very rapidly by the military and very successfully and with many positive social consequences but you know the American military decided I believe all three branches and I believe this was in the 1980s that it was illegal, it's now illegal in the US to induct someone to the armed force if they have an IQ of less than 82. And that's 10% approximately 10% of the population. And that is a dismal statistic because the military is chronically hungry for people.
And if their conclusion after close to 100 years of IQ testing was that 10% of the population can't be trained to do anything of any utility in the military that has well that speaks for itself if you think it through. And so it's no wonder people are leery of these tests and they're leery of what they reveal and the easy thing to say is well what they reveal isn't true you know it's the tests themselves but I'm afraid I couldn't swallow that. I spent 10 years looking at the IQ literature.
Well I mean when we talk about the military there are two big questions say what is the First World War when a lot of the IQ testing was fairly crude and when they had this you know they tended and a lot of literature which came out of the First World War was quite racist and I think Bingham for one recanted on what he'd said in 1930s and then said no no we were wrong it was a premature application of our methods we should have been more sensitive about cultural differences and linguistic abilities because you have a huge population of new immigrants.
After the Second World War I think it was a much more developed science and the most important thing it revealed in both Britain but most specifically in America was the huge amount of talent that was in the population that was being underutilized.
Right right. And so out of that comes the GI Bill because people are saying gosh there are all these clever people we're a technical scientific civilization we must use them we must we must promote them. So I think there's a big difference on the impact of the two things but these two questions that you raise one is the accuracy of the tests but the other is whether they're accurate or not but the other is if they are accurate what they reveal about the human population and particularly the sheer range of abilities within the human population and so which is very wide.
The person who invented the term meritocracy was Michael Young who wrote this wonderful magnificent sort of really clever clever book in 1958 called The Rise of the Meritocracy and what he was saying in that book was that the problem with meritocracy the problem with IQ tests is that they work and the meritocracy works the general tenor on the left at that time is these tests were inaccurate they were missing children of ability they were allocating positions arbitrarily.
Michael Young says no no no no the real problem is that they work that they're accurate but the sort of society that you create by selecting people and promoting people on the basis of ability is the opposite of socialism he was a socialist he was one of the authors of the labor manifesto of 1945. He says he didn't like the sort of society that was being created by the use of these tests precisely because it promoted people by ability and it revealed very wide differences in people's capacity to do things and he wanted to paint the political classes.
That is a painful thing well that is a painful thing for anyone psychologically and socially but you know the rub is always yeah yeah compared to what exactly? Oh well compared to my hypothetical utopia it's like no no your hypothetical utopia is very low resolution and impractical and if you implemented it wouldn't turn out the way you think it is think it would so we're not gonna go there how about compared to other real things and you do that in your book in your recent book you walk through other forms of social organization you talk about dynastic organizations you talk about aristocratic organizations that are based well that were based let's say mostly on the possession of land and that tended to be hereditary so they were unbelievably stratified and also completely immobile and so you can dream up a non-stratified society but maybe you could comment on this too I found out late in my life the existence of the predo distribution and the Matthew principle it's quite common among economists.
I mean we tended to think in psychology that everything was normally distributed but there's lots of things that aren't when I developed a test called the creative achievement test which is widely used psychometrically now and when we first administered it to hundreds of people and it was basically it's a test that sums the number of creative achievements you've concretely made in 13 different creative realms well it was wildly predo distributed the median score was zero across 13 dimensions but there were people who had scores of 80 they were way out on the tails and we couldn't even utilize the test it was hard to utilize the test statistically because it didn't conform to the normal distribution assumptions that underlie, well IQ testing for example and that's when I started to become aware of the predo distribution and the predo distribution bedevils every society and so you get stratification and so these people who are objecting to the meritocracy well are they objecting to stratification and I'd say yes and so okay well what's the solution to that well then it turns into something like well it's capitalism's fault which is unbelievably shallow analysis and that's why I liked your historical approach as well.
What I tried to do in my book was to look at the history of meritocracy and treat as a historical problem rather than just as a philosophical problem or a legal problem because what I wanted to show is that if you look the meritocracy is a relatively recent thing and it's an extremely radical thing and if you look at the history of previous societies most previous societies have been based on principles other than merit because there is an argument that says of course we all believe in meritocracy it's a natural way of doing things and what's the point of it? what's the point of discussing everybody believes this in fact for most of human history societies have not been organized according to the principle of meritocracy they've been organized according to the principle of the inheritance of positions from father to son so dynasties they've been organized according to the principle.
of description whereby the position that you have in society is one that you inherit and one that in somehow is regarded as natural the world is naturally organized into hierarchies you know Shakespeare talks about a great deal about how people should reconcile themselves with their position in society because if they try and change it it will cause some terrible problem almost a psychic problem or a natural order of thickness I'm chewing that string and you know what discord follows as you see in Troyless and Cressida and also so you have a notion that a static society is a good society a hierarchical society is a good society that power and position and property should flow through families and you know dynasties that should ruin world and also you get the question of how in such a society do you allocate positions well there are actually you know very significant answers to that what one is that you give them away as patronage another is that you buy them and sell them so there was a huge market in jobs in these pre-marriageocratic societies that you know you would buy a job in the civil service or you would buy a job as a tax collector France was a particularly extreme example of this but most pre-modern societies you know had a market in jobs jobs were regarded as property and one of the most the things that didn't exist in that world was a notion that there is a precise relationship between having a job and your ability to perform that job so I quote the example in the book of a woman called Margaret Scott who is the wet nurse to the Prince of Wales in 1783 she was given a pension of 200 pounds a year and 200 pounds a year in those days was a great deal of money but it was also a great deal of money when you consider the fact that the Prince of Wales was 23 years old at the time and so probably not in need of a wet nurse but you know there just isn't a notion that a job is something you do that you need to be qualified for that is a set of commitments to your employer so let's take that apart for a minute because partly what you're pointing to is that the idea of meritocracy is so deeply rooted in our culture that we assume that its existence is something akin to a natural fact it's not a natural fact and it's a fragile fact it's something that we can lose very easily if we do the wrong things so that's why I spend so much time talking about history because what I want to prove in this book is it's something that was created historically and could be destroyed historically we could we could move towards a non-meritocratic society which is what worries me so and yeah so we assume now I think that if I have a job my job doesn't really matter what the job is to produce something productive that other people value in as efficient a manner as possible at a cost that's less than what I'm paid yeah right right and all of those assumptions are questionable and right I mean they're not natural kinds which is partly what you're pointing out.
And do and then okay so alright so we'll accept that let's let's go to the other side of this for a minute so part of the problem I think is terminology part of what makes people resistant to this because we also tend to sort of casually talk about elite institutions which in clock implies a kind of moral valuing we talk about meritocracy which implies that the people at the top are of greater merit right and and that means to the degree that that meritocracy is established on the basis of let's say fluid intelligence that we're conflating moral worth with abstract intellectual ability and that's really a catastrophe and that's part of the pride of intellect and you talked about the best and the brightest and and one of the criticisms that that book leveled against the meritocracy was precisely one of intellectual pretension and arrogance right it's just because you're smart doesn't mean you're good it doesn't mean you're wise it doesn't mean you're meritorious it doesn't even necessarily mean that the decisions you make are going to be better than decisions that other people would make using other. means
Now it's complicated because as you point out in the book it's quite likely if you're in the top let's say 10th of the IQ distribution and you start poor that you won't end up poor where it right and so I believe I read a paper at one point that that suggested that you were much better off in the United States if you were born in the top quartile of IQ than if you were in the born in the top quartile of wealth if you had to pick at birth yes I think so yes I think there's so much evidence of the same the same thing yeah and I do have some sympathy I mean one of the things I've been trying to sort out in my own mind is the the conceptual inadequacy of both the left and the right when it comes to profound individual differences and ability
So I had a client at one point who had an IQ of under 80 and and he he couldn't read well he collected a lot of books because he was a bit obsessive but he couldn't read and I spent about 30 hours training him to fold a piece of paper a letter into three equal segments so that it could be put effectively into an envelope with enough accuracy that a multitude of such envelopes would actually pass through an envelope sorting machine and it was something I could do without thinking and it he couldn't really do it after 30 hours of training and so it I I struggled for about a year and a half to find him a volunteer job and it turns out you know volunteer jobs are actually harder to get in many ways than paying jobs now because there's so many police checks and that sort of thing you have to go through and they're very technically challenging and I sent him to a government agency that that was hypothetically designed to help people like him find a job and they said you know type up your resume and send it out it's like well he can't type and he doesn't have a resume and he can't use a computer and that's not helpful thank you very much you have no idea what you're dealing with here and so this 10% of the population let's say the liberals think you can train anyone to do anything which is rubbish and the conservatives think if you work hard enough there's no obstacles to your success and that's also rubbish in some situations because hard work alone isn't gonna do it and so we have a real conundrum
Now what we're doing right now I think is shooting the messenger it's like we don't want to hear this so we'll get rid of tests that are valid and reliable so you know the heart of my D filthy system also to some extent at the heart of this this new book the aristocracy of towns is this group of psychologists who emerge in the late 19th century and become very dominant in the 20th century up to the 1960s who are psychometricians who are concerned with the psychology of individual differences measuring individual differences and what I would say that those people are essentially is bell curve liberals they believe in the bell curve they believe in the normal distribution they believe that the range of individual differences is very wide but they say that those natural facts about the world lead one to liberal conclusions they need they lead one to believing in a more active state a more child-centered set of educational policies and a more redistribution more restrictive tax system as well so in Britain where I think bell curve liberalism is particularly dominant they they would all be members of the Labour Party or at the very least of the Liberal Party they would have all voted in 1945 for the Labour Party they believe that the very fact that people have wide ranges of individual ability means that you have to have an active and generous welfare state because it's not their fault that they're not very bright it's not their fault that the bottoms decided that they can't look after themselves so they need to be as it were looked after through a pension system through through a system of redistributive taxation as I say through supplements that you're making a case there too that's an interesting case because you're actually making the case that it is the observation of genuine and profound differences in people's ability that are fundamental and maybe not even easily changed by social policy that actually justifies the redistributive welfare state at a moral level right and so that's something for people who oppose the idea of meritocracy to really think about for a while
well I mean John Rawls actually you know it's central to his theory of justice that you should have redistribut I mean he John Rawls very interestingly as a as electives is also a sort of genetic deterministic says that people don't own their talents and they inherit their talents and so if they're born very bright it's not because they're morally superior it's because they happen to be lucky if they're born not so bright it's because they happen to be unlucky and therefore society has an obligation to redistributive resources from the from the lucky to the unlucky I think that's a weak philosophical argument in some sense because I could I think you could just as easily say if that is the case those a priori presumptions about the distribution of talent it is in everyone's best interests regardless of the causes of the differences and ability to radically incentivize those who can so they will produce as much as they can for the rest of us who can't yes so what what is interesting about it is that there is a liberal case for redistribution based on the idea of inheritance of of people's you know inherited IQ and I think that was the dominant position on the left
so we've got a whole bunch of some let's say JBS Hallday and who is a sort of Marxist who is the sort of editor of The Daily Worker which was the Communist Party magazine who's also a biologist he wrote this this this book I haven't had it on my shelves here in 1932 called The Inequality of Man and it's all about you know if we have if we know that people are unequal what do we do about this and he thought that what you do about it is have a bigger more active more enlightened enlightened state and something happened in the 90s let's say in the 1960s roughly in the 1960s whereby this notion became forbidden on the left the left became not only more egalitarian rather than meritocratic but it also became committed to a blank slate theory of the world and that anything that questioned the blank slate theory of the world was associated with the right
Let me ask you some questions about that. I see the malevolent side of the insistence politically on blank slate as justifying the utopian pretensions of those who would like to remake man in their in the image of their political ideology. And if the blank slate argument is true then we could be anything that those who would like to change us could make us into and why not? And so that bothers me.
I also think it's unbelievably by naive both biologically and psychologically. It's clearly not the case. There isn't a deep psychological biologically minded psychological thinker who adheres to anything like a blank slate theory. Even the behaviors have completely abandoned that notion and they probably did the most rigorous job of attempting to test its validity.
And then with regards to the the the rejection on the left let's say part of that was a consequence of persistent ethnic differences in IQ testing and that's proved something. Well, that's a no one knows what to do with that. Now I read some recent work showing that the ethnic differences and racial differences that pop up in the IQ literature are much less evident at the age of five and increase over time. That's quite interesting because it does indicate that perhaps there's an educational deviation that's occurring that's that's at least at part at least in part at the basis of this.
But it's proved a very thorny and intractable problem with endless social consequences particularly in the US and we don't know what to do with that, I would say. And the easy answers to say what the tests themselves are biased but then you're stuck with well what are you going to use instead and what do you mean biased and compared to what exactly? Yeah, on the ethnic differences on the group difference. I mean of course these are differences between group averages and that you know there is an incredibly wide range of talents and abilities within groups. Differences within groups are much bigger than average differences between groups evidently but it is a very American set of data.
And I think that what we're seeing in Britain at the moment which is very interesting, I think, is that we've had a series of schools which are called academies which are a bit like American magnet schools but there's schools that can select people at the age of 16 once they've done their own levels when they go into A levels there. There's a lot of them in the East end of London in poorer parts of other cities and we found that these schools which have been very academically rigorous, very focused on achievement, have been designed to say that if you've got a poor population what you need to do to it is to give it opportunity and give it rigor rather than sort of dumb down education and these schools have been extremely good at getting members of ethnic minorities into high quality universities.
So there's one called Brampton Manor Academy in the East End of London which has an ethnic minority dominant population which has the majority of its students have free school meals which is a measure of poverty and they now get as many or more children every year into Oxbridge than Eaton does. So, and again you have, you know, in the United States by percent or total number in total number. So in fact, by percent, I think that would have been would be better because Eaton's a very big school.
伦敦东区有一所名为 Brampton Manor Academy 的学校,拥有占主导地位的少数民族群体,学生中大多数享受免费的学校餐食,这是一种贫困程度的衡量方式。现在,他们每年考进牛津剑桥大学的学生数量已经与伊顿公学持平甚至更多。并且,在美国,也可以按百分比或总人数来衡量。事实上,按百分比计算会更好,因为伊顿公学是一所很大的学校。
These schools have been doing amazingly well and they've surprised everybody by how successful they've been so there is a lot of drive in poor ethnic minority population and what we're finding in Britain is that the people who are doing worse are white working-class children, particularly white working-class boys. And they're being surpassed in education by Africans, West Indians and obviously, you know, Oriental Chinese ethnic minorities which have traditionally done done very well.
So it's a different it's a bit of a different picture from from the United States okay so what do you think's going on with the white working class in England? The white working class in England is it's partly that they're living in areas where opportunities don't abound. They're living in the north of England, they're living in areas. These were people who were part of the industrial working class and we had a massive de-industrialization from you know particularly from the 1980s onwards. So they're in left-behind areas which you've seen their industries destroyed so that is a depressing thing.
And I think that's limited their ambitions, it certainly limited their access to good schools and ambitious teachers. And I think also you have a culture which tells them that they're bad people or that they, you know, we have a culture that celebrates almost every group in society apart from the white working classes.
Yes, particularly. Well, I've seen the conflation of ambition and achievement with power and domination in that sort of messaging right and and those things shouldn't be conflated. It's very disheartening.
I think particularly for boys and girls even if they're. poor still have the message that's sent pretty strong by our culture that well whatever a girl wants to accomplish and achieve that's to be celebrated there's no there's no fear of patriarchal power lurking underneath that let's say and so yeah I think it's it's it's dangerous to underestimate the demoralizing effect that that kind of language and messaging that's constantly applied actually has.
Yeah so we you know we and like the United States about 60% of people in universities now are women and the people at the very people who've got the least opportunities I would say are probably the children the male children are white working class people living in areas like Stoke or Newcastle who've seen you know industrial jobs disappearing but still have this conception that men must be people who sort of make things or do things and can't should be sitting behind desks or be involved in the caring professions or something like that and those are the people I think who really are stuck with that without they don't have role models and they don't have a general sense of where they fit into the post-industrial hierarchy.
Yeah well that the attitude that men are people who do things with their hands is a perfectly useful attitude in industrial society when you're in the lower strata the population because that's exactly what the case is and there's plenty of honor and not as well and so it's not easy for that to be replaced when that was the basis of productive effort itself and of a success so why do you think that your book has been positively received all things considered in the UK?
Is the assault on the meritocracy let's say or in the conflation of the idea of intellectual prowess with merit maybe is that is that not as contentious an issue in general in the UK? Now we have a lot of the currents that you have in the United States but in a sort of weak aware as a sort of echo chamber in the United States but we still have a memory I think of the meritocracy as being something that was progressive and something that was a cultural memory of the meritocracy being something that's progressive and something that displaced the old aristocratic elite and I think both the new Tories and the old labor people can agree that you know the old aristratically there's something wrong with them so we have we have a better memory of the failures of a pre-meritocratic society than you do in the United States I think I would say.
I think the situation in the United States is strange because one of the things that we're better at at the moment in Britain is I think promoting social mobility or doing something about social mobility that as I say we've got the Academy schools which are providing real opportunities for an excellent education in the inner cities Oxford and Cambridge are doing something to sort of reach out to a much broader strata of population they're creating sort of extra years where they take people in people from poor backgrounds and give them an extra years education so they're they're basically broadening their selection without abandoning the principle of merit I think exactly without abandoning the principle of merits that they may be softening it a bit in some some areas but in the United States you still have I think you I mean you're not in the United States I believe you're in Canada but in close enough for now they they still have legacies which exists they still have athletic scholarships which they still have incredible advantages for the children of faculty members and if you look at the the social composition of Harvard it's exceptionally elite institution plutocratic institution you know people come from very very rich backgrounds at Harvard so I think America at the top of society is doing less to revive the meritocratic spirit than we in Britain are doing and what it's doing instead because it sort of feels some sort of vague guilt about the fact that you know Harvard is a privilege in 1920 rich university is they leap into wokism as a sort of almost as a sort of defense mechanism to their guilt.
I happen to believe that a lot of a lot of this wokism is a sort of way in which the old privileged white ruling class holds on to its position by preserving a certain you know it's us plus certain selected members of or of the excluded classes but yeah well I saw that often in in in my students who were of the radical left persuasion.
At elite institutions like Harvard where I was there for seven years as a professor and then less so at the University of Toronto but it's less it's a less elite and plutocratic institution by a large margin but it always grated on me to some degree because I thought well here you are at that in this institution and so you are by definition already a member of the class of oppressors that you hypothetically despise and the fact that you are here and accepted this and going through this means that you've accepted it and now you want to be on the side of the oppressed and you want to have all the advantages of the hypothetical oppressor simultaneously seems a bit much to ask for right to be a victim and an oppressor at the same time.
Yeah well I think we should always start with the with the question of what are you personally willing to give up but but but still I mean what so what I think one of them I worry about abandoning the meritocratic principle. I think that as I said the meritocratic principle is something that's fragile it's something that was created relatively recently in history it's something that can be destroyed. And once you start making exceptions so we'll make an exception for the children of faculty members we'll make an exception for alumni we'll make an exception for people who give us a lot of money we'll make an exception for people who were born into certain certain groups of the population we'll make we'll accept the meritocratic principle ultimately you end up completely destroying the meritocratic principle.
But you also end up reintroducing the idea that people should be judged as members of groups and the fundamental thing about the meritocratic principle is you judge people as individuals not as members of groups. And as soon as you begin to reintroduce this collective principle judging people by members of groups then you have a different principle as the on the basis okay so and and so so are there advantages do you think to classifying people by group if we play devil's advocate?
Because that's I see that exactly the same thing happening there's this insistence that immutable group identity should trump individual merit and then there's a deeper criticism which is and hit the deepest criticism in some sense is your understanding of merit your concept of merit and I'm speaking of you personally as an advocate of this position is nothing but a reflection of your unreflected demand say to justify your position as a beneficiary of the 11 system and also to justify the privilege you have as a member of your particular ethnicity and and background that's Foucault's criticism right of virtually. everything well let me answer the two questions and I think you probably won't agree with my first answer but I think that there are certain groups of people who by dint of their history do deserve to be treated as groups who've been collectively wronged and this is a you know I've been a long-term opponents of affirmative action I've now come round to seeing its merits because I think the African American population the United States because of the legacy of slavery because of the legacy of Jim Crow and because redlining and segregation by residents lasted for such a long time in the United States that there is there is a case for affirmative action for reaching out positively to look for talent and to look for potential
and making an incredibly hard effort to do that as a way of making up for historical wrongs but historical wrongs which continue to limit opportunities but I would say what I do not accept as a conclusion from that is that if you can just do it by numbers hitting number targets you can't just take them into the universities and just you know hit your quotas and then not do anything about it it should be part of a very broad policy of affirmative education not just affirmative action but affirmative education as I say what they're doing in Oxford now is giving people who come from historically underprivileged backgrounds and giving them a foundation year spending a whole year making sure that they get up to standards so they can compete with people who come from from from being through a more rigorous educational system and I think one of the many problems with affirmative action in America is that they've tended to accept people and then just let them do what they do and quite often that means you know either dropping out or moving to courses that are that are less than or or gerrymandering the standards themselves or credential the standards themselves
well okay so I'm gonna press you on that a little bit yeah you did point out just before we had this last bit of conversation that the danger in the elite institutions in the US in particular are the exceptions to the meritocratic principle right and so how do you reconcile the the desire that you just expressed to in certain cases to redress historical wrongs with the problem of exception to the fundamental merit merit individualistic meritocratic rule because you know it's it's it's that's a typical conservative objection in some sense it's like yeah yeah that's your exception you know but then so there's gonna be 10 other people that have slightly different case to make for exceptions and then we're back to the same problem so we should just stick to the damn harsh 11 that's an actual cut off right despite the fact that it causes a certain amount of trouble because there isn't a better solution sure absolutely as I say I came to this position reluctantly because you know it's it's an inconsistent position but I also think it's a pragmatic position
I think that the injustice involved with slavery was of such a different order that we need to make recompense for it or that the society in general has to make recompense for it and it continues to shape the opportunities of or of black Americans but I would not extend that principle let's say to recent immigrants who by the very fact that they've immigrated to the United States have massively improved their life chances.
I'd like to keep it limited to essentially the descendants of slaves and also I would like it's say that it's something that should be time limited it's something that we want to get beyond we want to get beyond beyond it and to a world in which we can begin to judge people purely on the basis of as individuals.
What that timeframe would be I'm not sure but it seems needs to be something that's ended and that's why I think there's a really important distinction between affirmative action and the talk now of diversity.
This diversity is based on very different philosophy from affirmative action the philosophy of affirmative action is we did something bad and we've got to make up for it. The philosophy within the confines of a meritocratic system yes within the confines of a meritocratic system we were actively searching for talents and we have to actively search for talents in certain populations much more than we do in other populations because of their history.
Now the logic of diversity is very different from that because the argument of diversity from the back case was that diversity is a good in itself and you have to judge people as members of groups because it's by mixing those members of groups because different groups have different characteristics that you produce better educational outcomes. Now that's yes there's no evidence for that that's wrong technically wrong well it's partly wrong because look we could talk about one of the one of the arguments you lay out in your book that's that certain psychologists and they tend to be educational psychologists have levied against strict meritocratic tests like those that are fundamentally IQ tests so that would be the SAT the GRE all everything that's used for effort entrance into undergraduate universities where that's used in graduate school professional schools that's all IQ testing essentially and people will say it's not but that's because they don't know what they're talking about.
Okay so then you might say well IQ is pretty singular it's pretty good predictor of of long-term success in a cognitively complex society but there are other sources of variance possibly so you get thinkers like Robert Sternberg for example who talked about practical intelligence and the multiple intelligence theorist Howard Gardner and yeah both of whose scientific work I think is shoddy beyond beyond comprehension and a terrible answer to a problem that's been answered actually quite nicely psychometrically we know there are other sources of variability there's variability in temperament five dimensions that's a lot five dimensions and I don't think that that's a biased finding in it it was it was agnostic theoretically it emerged out of pure brute force statistics that's where the diversity lies and there is not a lot of racial difference in temperament so the idea that group membership produces diversity of a sort that would actually broaden the human scope of any discussion any corporation etc etc is just wrong there's no evidence for it whatsoever and it's even worse than that because it makes the presumption that the essential source of diversity is in fact ethnicity and race and that can go wrong very badly.
But the diversity argument is a much more profound threat to a marriage of political society than the affirmative action argument because the diversity has no no possible time limit and it's fundamentally opposed to individualism it's fundamentally illiberal because it says that group membership is fundamental to our identities and that you must judge people at least partly if not primarily on the basis of group identity but I wanted to move to go back to your point about Foucault which I think is a very interesting point and I think one which is which is absolutely refuted by history because one of the arguments that the critics of meritocracy make is that meritocracy is basically propaganda for plutocrats or it's propaganda for the ruling elite the ruling elite chooses people according to its own criteria it invents those criteria they're essentially the criteria of the capitalist class or the ruling class and only people who fit those criteria will will be selected so it's purely socially constructed yeah on the basis of the drive to power of the drive to power but I would say that actually something very different is going on and that's why the history really matters here is that merit meritocracy is a Promethean concept or it's a it's a mutable concept that actually has its own internal logic so if you look at Britain as an example.
Of this in the middle of the 19th century a group of educated bourgeois men the intellectual aristocracy decided that they wanted to take power from the land of the elite and they said that they wanted that they would do people like them Thomas McCauley people with names like like like like Huxley and and hold in and all and Keynes and these people wanted to and Stephen wanted to have power and so they said what they needed to do was to have open competition for jobs in the civil service, Oxfordshire fellowships and the rest and open competition that was determined by your ability to perform in examinations so that you could say well these are a bunch of people who we who are advancing their power they vent these ideas to advance their power but look at what happens historically.
First of all, you get women coming along and saying, well if my brother can get a fellowship of Trinity College Cranbridge by doing this exam, why can't I? And indeed, they say, you've got to open competition if open competition means anything. You can't just exclude women if examinations test objective ability. You can't just say we'll only have them for half of humanity. So the very logic is self-perpetuating. So you do indeed get a bunch of very clever women who come along and knock on the door of these institutions. So I tell this story in my book of a woman called Philippa Fawcett who, in 1892, sits for the Cambridge Mathematics Tripos which is the hardest examination in the world, and she comes top. She gets the best results. She beats everybody. But of course, at that point, women weren't actually officially allowed to sit these examinations. So she is classified as above the senior Wrangler. The senior Wrangler is number one, but she's classified as above the senior Wrangler because she has taken on this system and beaten it.
Then there's the working class. You've got a whole bunch of people who come from poor backgrounds but are born very bright, who are born with a great desire for knowledge. They come along, they knock on the door of the civil service, and they knock on the door of Oxford and Cambridge and say, judge us by these standards, and we'll get into these universities. And the same happens. You get somebody like W.E.B. Dubois in the United States, you know, a black person who becomes the first, I think, 10-year professor at Harvard, writes his magnificent book on the Philadelphia Negro, writes this great stuff on the talented tenth of the population who are going to drive progress in all populations. So what you're doing is not creating a system whereby the ruling class can regulate who comes up and who doesn't, whereby the ruling class defines what merit is. You have a system which, by its own logic of open competition of examinations, changes the nature of the ruling class.
接着是工人阶级。你会发现有很多人来自贫困的背景,但天生聪明,渴望知识。他们会去 civil service 的门前敲门,去牛津和剑桥的门前敲门,说“按照这些标准来评判我们,我们可以考进这些大学”。同样的情况出现在美国的 W.E.B. Du Bois 身上,他是第一位在哈佛担任10年教授职位的黑人,写了关于费城黑人的壮丽著作,还写了关于天才十分之一的人口将驱动所有人口进步的伟大文章。因此你所做的不是创造一个制度,让统治阶级来规定谁能够晋升,谁不能够。你创造了一个系统,通过公开的竞争和考试规则的逻辑,改变了统治阶级的性质。
I don't think any of the people who set up the system in the first place imagined universities in which 60% of other people going to them would be women imagined a system in which you'd have massive, massive numbers of ethnic minority people or of working-class people going to go into universities. So merit is not a conspiracy of the Platocratic elite. Indeed, it's something which constantly reconfigures society from with the outside group coming in and getting ahead as a result of the openness of competition.
Okay, so I want to hit hard at that argument because I've been trying to parse out in my own mind exactly what it was that Foucault was doing. And so one of the problems that has emerged since the 1960s is the problem of the realization of the complexity of perception. So up until about the 1960s, it was more or less assumed that the world was just made out of objects in some simple way, and that we saw those objects and then we thought about them and evaluated them and acted. And that's just wrong. That isn't how it works at all. It's almost impossible to perceive a visual landscape. We almost, we have almost no idea how we do it. It looks like you need an intelligence that's embodied in some sense and that can act in order to perceive.
So perception is extraordinarily tightly tied to action, and there's almost an infinite number of interpretations of any given visual landscape. And the same problem bedevils all other forms of perception that emerged in AI and has bedeviled robotics engineers ever since, which is why we don't have robots zipping around doing everything that we could do. And then it also emerged in literary criticism. It's like, well, how many ways can a text be interpreted? Well, innumerable ways. Well, how do you know which of those ways is canonical? Oh, we don't know how we know that. Well, how do you know the whole canon is canonical then because it's just a meta text? Well, we don't know that. Well, how is it you understand a text given its innumerable interpretations? We don't know that. We don't know how we do that. Well, maybe you just do it as part of your drive to power. Yeah. Okay, premature answer to a very difficult question. That's Foucault. He essentially assumes that the will to power is at the basis of categorization itself and even at the basis of the process of categorization. So, even a deeper criticism, it’s nothing but your drive to elevate yourself in power hierarchies that governs the process by which you categorize and even your justifications for that categorization.
Okay, I think that is the most cynical thing you can think, and I don't say that lightly, but it's not that easy to detail out what the alternative is. Now you're pointing at it to some degree with this issue of merit that transcends the power drive of any particular group of people, even those who might be pushing the idea of merit. Well, there's something deep down in there.
What is it that’s being facilitated? that isn't the drive to power and and we haven't got that conceptualized well it the university especially the humanities departments wouldn't have been so easily taken over by the postmodernist types who insist upon this kind of interpretation if the counter argument was well articulated well one of the problems with the problems with Foucault the many problems with Foucault is I'm not sure how I wouldn't go about disproving his claims because they're so all encompassing and so so sort of mutually self-reinforcing I don't know how one would would would say you're not your your interpretation of text is is not right well you did it with a historical examples well your claim is I'd have to do that but I would say that you know Foucault has a huge influence on the revolt against the meritocracy in the in the 1960s and 70s because he's basically saying that the categories the categories that we use to make distinctions between people are as you say the products not of not not of sense or organizational necessity or convenience or efficiency but of power.
I would I happen to believe that the the arguments in favor of meritocracy can be made in terms both of social justice and in terms of economic efficiency. I think we can demonstrate that meritocratic institutions and meritocratic countries and systems are more economically productive that they have a higher you know a higher efficient level of efficiency that the productivity rates are higher in such societies than in other societies. so just to dismiss it all as a mishmash of power plays I think you know it can be subject to.
Well, I okay so let's take that let's take that let's take that as a starting point then because at least in principle one of the things that the people who claim that those in power are doing by imposing their category system is subjecting those who are deprived to a level of absolute deprivation that's so terrible that it's unjust and immoral but if the counterclaim is no you wait a minute when we make arguments on the basis of individualistic meritocracy and the net consequence of that is that although there's still fair degree of income disparity that the bottom gets lifted up far enough so that absolute privation let's say of the of the sort that defines starvation just to take an example no longer exists that you interfere with that at your peril even if you're on the left and you actually care for the poor and and dispossessed absolutely.
I can I believe that I can demonstrate quite clearly that meritocratic societies have higher levels of productivity if you take a family company or you've take family companies in general as a category and compare them with public companies that that will appoint people primarily on merit you will see that public companies are more productive that they grow faster that they're better at turning inputs into outputs that the family companies family companies have a much bigger big of variance of performance but the average performance of public companies if you take countries that are pretty meritocratic they will have a higher growth rate than countries that aren't meritocratic so let's take Singapore which is in many ways the most meritocratic country in the world its growth rate which has been extraordinary has been powered by its use of human capital by its meritocracy compare Singapore with Sri Lanka which in 1960 they were on comparable income levels I think Sri Lanka was a bit richer Singapore by focusing relentlessly on meritocracy has pulled ahead.
Or take and then you think the you think the data linking meritocracy per se and the stringent meritocracy in Singapore to that economic advantage you can collect data on this another example would be if you take Sweden or any of the North European countries and compare them with Greece and Italy Greece and Italy being nepotistic or or familial in their organization and much more much more dominated by family companies and much more dominated by informal familial arrangements they have got lower growth than Sweden and also the rate of growth in Italy has been slowing down recently as they've moved towards you know as they as as the effect of high technology has has began to kick in so the growth rate in Italy which was quite fast after the Second World War as society as as as economies are becoming more advanced is begin to slow down because of familial nepotistic organization just is proving to be incompatible with with with an IT based society and there's there's plenty of economists Luigi Dzinger is at the University of Chicago primarily. who've done work showing that meritocracy you know with using big data sets and how companies select people on how open the educational system is on how much corruption there is that the meritocratically organized societies have higher growth rates well there's there's a very very well developed psychometric literature in management psychology the the actual science of management psychology there is a bit of that although you know most of management psychology is rubbish and the same for most of leadership psychology but there is there's good data looking at difference in individual productivity rates across a multi-year period after hiring depending on the method of selection and the best method is one that's G loaded the second best method is one that assess conscientiousness big five conscientiousness the best test combination is a combination of those two a weighted combination of those two and it predicts individual productivity at about point six which is staggeringly high for bi-psychometric standards by the standards of such things and that doubt is very very well developed by I think the best psychometricians and statisticians that are working in psychology and you know if you're a social scientist and you say well those things aren't believable I would say I defy you to find anything social scientists have ever demonstrated using any methods other than those methods that show results more than one third is great so if you throw out all that you throw at everything it's the same method but so if we accept that the economic growth is a good thing and improvements in productivity are good things because they make the life of the average person better as well as the life of the successful entrepreneurs better I think the consequences of this which I was saying which can be demonstrated are extremely big and this is what leads me to the biggest worry in my book and that is that we live in a world that doesn't just consist of the West we live in a world in which you're getting the biggest and most serious challenge to Western dominance that we've seen ever which is coming from China and that if we are seeing at the moment meritocracy being abandoned in various ways in the United States at a time when I believe that China is becoming more like Singapore and taking meritocracy much more seriously both in terms of its educational system which is very very competitive in terms of its university system which is both highly selective and growing all the time in the way that the Communist Party operates and I think it does set itself the form and standards and even promotes people on the basis of examinations if we have America becoming less meritocratic or less enthusiastic about meritocracy and China becoming more meritocratic or at least more enthusiastic about meritocracy that presents the possibility of a future in which China really pulls ahead of the United States you know I think I accept there are lots of objections to this China has massive levels of corruption it has the red princes it has enormous inefficiencies and internal inequalities and the rest of it but imagine if it if I'm right imagine if China really is slowly slouching towards being a Singapore but with 1.4 billion people yeah not so slowly you know not slowly yeah yeah that has massive implications for the future and what is America doing at the moment you've got gifted programs being abandoned you've got SATs being abandoned for university entrance Boston Latin which has used to select people on the basis of examinations it's ceasing to do so and is now accepting on the people on the basis of lotteries the same with Lowell High School in San Francisco you've got these these books like Michael Sandel and Markovitz's book attacking the principle of meritocracy
At the same time that you've got this sort of rather plutocratic Ivy League system so you're getting the ladder and then you've got the attacks on the elite schools in in New York so you've got the ladder being just pulled down on the one hand and you've got you know a sort of woke plutocratic elites on the one hand enjoying the fruits of all this education this vast dowries that the education system has but on the other hand not really being willing to reach out which is what a meritocracy should be about to the most talented groups in the whole of society. I think that means ultimately the the America loses and China wins which is not something I want to see.
Well I spent a lot of time in Silicon Valley and it's a very interesting place to be and what you see there is an unbelievable concentration of unbelievably smart people and so that's a merit-based establishment and look what it's produced. I mean it's absolutely stunning it's absolutely remarkable it's singular in some sense and that's all a consequence of the because I mean you get meritocratic selection and that's one thing but then you get this multiply multiplier effect when you get people who have passed through that system and they all get together and you've seen also the tremendous consequences of exactly that for India for example because the the Indian Institute of Technology is incredibly selective and it's producing graduates who are certainly the equal of MIT graduates which is really saying something and so many of them many of their best and brightest went to Silicon Valley and what's happened is they've dumped immense amounts of capital back into India and and facilitated the development of a robust technological society there and so it's it's been to everyone's stunning benefit assuming as you said that economic growth and growth and material prosperity are valuable and you know you could critique that idea you could say well we should be more ascetic we should there are other values we should pursue than material prosperity but I do not see that coming from the left what I see happening is an insistence that the corrupt aspect of our current society is the lack of material prosperity at the bottom and simultaneous interference with the only process we know of that could that has historically demonstrated its ability to redress that so what's going on like why why is that happened on the left well why is left.
我在硅谷待了很长时间,那是一个非常有趣的地方,你能看到那里汇聚了大量极端聪明的人,这是一个基于功绩的机构,看看它所产生的成果吧。我是说这个地方绝对令人惊叹,绝对值得注意,从某种意义上来说是独一无二的,这都是因为……你能得到选才用功、层层选拔的人才,但当这些人汇聚在一起时,就会产生更多效应,你可以从印度看到这一点,例如印度理工学院的选拔非常苛刻,它培养的毕业生同样优秀,可以和 MIT 的毕业生媲美,这真的非常了不起。他们中的许多精英前往硅谷,现在,他们将大量的资本投入到印度,促进了当地科技社会的发展,这对所有人都是惊人的收益,但前提是,假设像你说的,经济增长和物质繁荣是有价值的,你当然可以批评这个观点,你可以说,我们应该更为禁欲,我们应该追求其他价值,而非物质繁荣,但我没有看到这种思想从左派那里出现,我看到的是一种坚持认为,当前社会腐败的方面是底层缺乏物质繁荣,与此同时干扰了我们唯一知道可以解决这个问题的过程,所以,为什么左派会这么想呢?
I just pick up on your point about MIT. MIT is now going through a big process of producing emission statements. Or, oh god, well you know. Do you know that 75 to the word merit from it? They've excluded the word merit. That's MIT of all places, yeah of all places. 75% of applicants to the UC system in the research science streams are rejected without consideration of their research history on the basis of their diversity statements.
Which is something introduced now in Canada to get a grant at many of the federal agencies. You now have to produce a diversity statement or some equivalent of that along with your research proposal. Yeah, something very, if you go back again to the late 19th century in the United States, you had a ruling class that became very worried about itself. It was very worried about the level of inequality, very worried about plutocracy, very worried it was becoming European and no longer sort of American.
What they did as a result of that was to construct a ladder of opportunity and throw that ladder down as deeply as possible. You know, from Harvard down to the local village school, there's a sort of sense that we must draw all the talents from right across this great country. Now we have the similar phenomenon which is the creation of a plutocratic elite which is very divorced from the whole of society.
But instead of saying, well, we must create a ladder, we must make sure that the ladder really works, we must get talent from everywhere we possibly can, they're saying, well, what does talent mean? Does it really exist? Can you measure it? Is it really a good thing or is it an instrument of ruling class power? You know, it's sort of a class bead games being played, and very little that's being done that will really increase the supply of real talents.
And some sources of talent, such as the Asian population, deliberately being ignored, and it's difficult not to conclude from that that you actually have an old plutocratic elite that is in these very convoluted ways using woke language basically engage in opportunity hoarding. They don't want to be displaced from these positions, and that's the net consequence of these sorts of actions.
Well, at least in the short term we'll see what happens as those ideas propagate because they're deeply, and especially the, the Foucault insistence, it's the thing that I think disturbs me the most, the idea that at the basis of the active categorization itself is nothing more than a totalitarian will to power.
That's a positively satanic vision of mankind it truly is and what really frightens me about that is what it means for how you treat your enemies. Look, it's like you're just out for your power, that's it, and me too. There's no place we can meet as civilized people between our power hierarchies, that place doesn't even exist.
And so what am I supposed to do with you if you oppose me if we can't come to an accord? Well, you don't have to think very long before you come up with a solution for that. Well, that's why the meritocracy, the history of meritocracy is so fascinating because it moves in directions which were never designed it was never designed to do in the first place.
You know, once you set up the principle of open competition, the groups that succeed that are coming up from submerged positions in society are succeeding without any sort of plan, and quite often against against the will of the the traditional ruling elites against the landed ruling elite is completely displaced by this by this process.
So, and it comes because the system of testing examination open competition has its own internal logic which is totally different from what Foucault would say because all the, all categories and all ideas must be instruments of the powerful. Yeah, all, and all, all categories no matter what they are, it's an unbelievably deep criticism, and I think it was a reflection of Foucault's character itself, frankly speaking. He's not someone I admire at all on the ethical front, no, no, I don't think, I think that's right.
But here we have subaltern groups. W.E.B. Dubois is a particularly interesting example when he talks about the talented tent, these are subaltern groups who are saying, well, this system provides opportunities which we must seize and which we can use to transform society peacefully. And you know, by by rising up intellectually, and again that's true of the woman's movement, it's, it's, it's, it's true of the working classes, you know, the aristocracy of labor.
It has something to do as well with our our struggle in movement as a society towards the integration of something like ethics across multiple levels of analysis. So, you know, so we say well, we want we want our workforce to do something productive that elevates our material well-being and and stop suffering.
And so we want to make the micro movements that we make and the selections that we engender systemically serve that in so the whole thing is the whole thing is integrated and that, that. that desire for that integration for the greater common good in some sense especially to elevate to what to alleviate the grossest elements of suffering at the most extreme end that's an ethic and a desire that isn't captured properly at all it's antithetical to the spirit of totalitarian oppression that Foucault insists right you know infects every act of categorization but meritocracy is also essentially a form of liberal individualism it says that individuals should be judged on the basis of their own efforts and abilities but it's also an idea that presents agency it has agency at the very heart it says that people can shape their own futures they can shape their characters they can they can work hard they can get ahead on the basis of work and ability that was always something you know that and that they're properly rewarded for that and that they need incentives but to do and that's something that the you know that Foucault is obviously against but a great bulk of modern sociology has been against that it's removed the agency and a sense of agency
but I think that exists I think that you know that there is a sense of agency we do shape shape our distances we can work hard or we can sleep all day and we can exercise our talents or we can choose not to exercise our talents or or yes and we have virtue using that we have virtues and we can exercise those and we're not fundamentally totalitarian demons driven not by nothing but the will to power exactly so I think that the philosophy embodied in liberal individualism is something that really needs to be defended and again it doesn't have enough defenders at the moment as you see that the large large chunks of academia in particular have gone to postmodernism which is ultimately dehumanizing or it takes it takes the agency out of being human which is what being human I think is is about so I think meritocracy is right at the very center of a liberal view of the world well let's say amen to that and close this discussion
thank you very much thank you very much I'm very much appreciated and enjoyed talking to you and great it went very quickly okay well well I hope I hope we'll talk again sometime in the future I hope so too