I think you're onto something true, but I'm curious when you think the negative returns would begin to come in--is the suggestion that the more educated would tend to neglect the problems of other social classes?
When I think of star players turned coaches, I imagine a great mind for execution having to pivot to being a great mind for planning, two very different (potentially uncorrelated) tasks. So maybe the idea is that intelligence (execution) would not be correlated with good governance (planning).
That could be right, but I think I'd want a little more on why we would expect it to produce worse results than the present state of play.
Based and platopilled.
I think you're onto something true, but I'm curious when you think the negative returns would begin to come in--is the suggestion that the more educated would tend to neglect the problems of other social classes?
When I think of star players turned coaches, I imagine a great mind for execution having to pivot to being a great mind for planning, two very different (potentially uncorrelated) tasks. So maybe the idea is that intelligence (execution) would not be correlated with good governance (planning).
That could be right, but I think I'd want a little more on why we would expect it to produce worse results than the present state of play.