When Michael Young, a British sociologist, coined the term meritocracy in 1958, it was in a dystopian satire. At the time, the world he imagined, in which intelligence fully determined who thrived and who languished, was understood to be predatory, pathological, far-fetched.
Today, however, we’ve almost finished installing such a system, and we have embraced the idea of a meritocracy with few reservations, even treating it as virtuous. That can’t be right. Smart people should feel entitled to make the most of their gift. But they should not reshape society so as to instate giftedness as a universal yardstick of human worth.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday June 19 2016, @12:37PM
Clearly, you failed to RTFA, or at least to understand the quoted part that talks about what the inventor of the term meant. You make the mistake of imagining the word "meritocracy" means what it sounds like. As the article points out, at least when coined, it meant rule flourish or languish by birthright.