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radicaledward's avatar

Smell being in your top five favorite ways to perceive the world made me laugh out loud! I love when people sneak in little bits like this.

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Klaus's avatar

"experts aren’t supposed to make policy; they’re supposed to advise political leaders on policy, so political leaders can combine expertise with value judgments to make decisions in the interest of the public."

I think there's an even bigger problem here: people don't know what they're experts in. I touched on this in my bullshit jobs article, but one company I was at had a very high ranking executive get fired and everything ran more smoothly after his firing. A lot of workers can attest to something similar. I think this stems from the following fact: a Chief X Officer or Vice President of X may not know much about X. What they really know is how to get promoted in a corporation. That's their actual expertise.

I think the same might be true of epidemiologists and other academics. You might think someone with a PhD in epidemiology is good at epidemiology, but their actual expertise might be getting citations and popularity within academia. I think Tyler Cowen, an economist who doesn't even pretend to know about epidemiology, offered a lot more insight into the pandemic (and more accurate predictions) than the alleged experts. Funny enough, Cowen is an economist, and I disagree with him on a lot of economics. I think his expertise is probably his general ability to analyze ideas rather than economics.

I also think the lack of actual knowledge among medical academics is especially obvious in at least one other hot-button political issue, but that's a topic for another day.

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