HMS Conqueror wrote:1. Without mass higher education, there will be no education. No, we're not going to forget quantum mechanics ever existed. The reason for this is that the tiny percentage of people who are capable of understanding (so far as it can be understood) and contributing to our knowledge of quantum mechanics are the people whose education will pay off for them. I'm talking about the mass of essay-regurgitators who would have entered the same office or customer service jobs straight from high school 50 years ago (or at 14 in the UK).
Having worked in offices for 20+ years prior to my career change to cobbler, I have to say that having more than rudimentary knowledge of reading, writing, and arithmetic is required for most modern office jobs. Even the low level support staff are expect to be able to read, use some common sense, and make low-level decisions. If they work in a specialized sort of office they may require additional knowledge, such as medical or legal terminology. A second-grade education isn't going to cut it, which is what you are apparently advocating here as the basics (I'm not conversant with how schools in the UK refer to the various levels students pass through).
2. Without mass education, people will be ignorant. I agree people will be ignorant in so far as they are already ignorant. People in high school do not learn about QM or much about nutrition or anything like that. They half-memorise what is needed for the test and then they forget most of it afterwards. This is a combination of lack of interest and lack of ability. For most people, education is job training, but for the most part it does not improve their ability to do any job, so it is socially wasteful. It is a social signal that you have a certain mixture of IQ and conscientiousness.
No, people will be
more ignorant because they are so often lazy, and a couple generations of laziness will result in profound ignorance. We've all heard people say "I haven't used that since high school" or the equivalent. If you never went to high school you never would have learned that or heard of it at all.
Part of school is learning and doing things you aren't particularly interested in and don't particularly like and discovering later they are actually somewhat useful. As an example, for damn sure I wouldn't have bothered with algebra if I hadn't been forced to, but I actually have found it pretty damn useful in my life. Ditto with several other subjects. And I'm someone with a personal library of books numbering in the four digit range and a common fixture at the local library (and, oh yes, I cruise the internet, too). I'm one of the self-motivated learners yet I know that I would have bypassed things if I'd been in charge of my own education. The average person isn't going to do as well as I am.
Aside from the academics, school teaches you to do shit you're not too fond of. It teaches you the rudiments of sitting in a room with other people. Absolutely there's a lot of other things it
should do and doesn't.
3. Self-teaching is no teaching at all. I hate to be the one to tell you, but reading books and papers is most of what people do to study for a degree and pretty much all that academics do if they want to learn something new.
True. However, if you're studying for a degree you are assigned a reading list by someone presumably more knowledgeable about the subject than you are, you aren't coming up with your own reading list. See, there's this problem that when you first embark on a course of study you are so ignorant you don't know what it is you don't know and some guidance is at the very least helpful. Unless you think going down blind alleys and missing major points a useful part of education?
It's certainly nice to debate and get help, but thanks to the internet that isn't much of an issue either.
Yes, it is. Again, it gets back to not knowing what you don't know. How do you determine who is an authority on a subject and who isn't? How do you check credentials? How to deal with the problem that people tend to stick with other folks who already agree with them, whether those people are right or wrong?
4. Education as social engineering. I think this is the worst and most sinister argument of them all. School (pre-university anyway) most closely resembles a conscript army camp, nothing like real society in a free country, and in this regard I think it is actively harmful. It teaches blind obedience to central authority, and organises people into arbitrary age-based cadres which they can't leave regardless of the actions of the other members or the suitability of what they're learning to their ability and interests.
Sometimes, you need to be exposed to a range of things to find out what your abilities and interests are. Not everything in life is going to be fun or interesting, yet you still have to deal with it and learning to cope with such realities at a young age is a useful skill. Living in a civilized state requires obedience to things like laws, we can't be truly free spirits doing whatever the hell we want and still maintain a viable society. Like everything else, laws and obedience can be overdone but that doesn't mean they're useless.
Also, while I completely agree it's important that people learn about history, I do not want my teachers or the government deciding what I learn about and how I interpret it in this sort of politically sensitive field.
But you're OK with the wild west of the internet and all its conspiracy theorists as an information source? Maybe TV "documentaries"?
5. Classification of fields. The whole point is no central authority needs to decide what is 'important enough' to be subsidised (nb: this is done anyway; the bar may be set quite low, but the government won't pay for you to be taught about Star Wars technology, for instance). It's decided organically by what people are willing to pay for. I don't know about in the US, but in my country most medical research is already funded by private charities, so genetics isn't in any danger.
Quite a bit of medical, science, and technological research in the US is subsidized by the Federal government. Rather useful things like the internet came out of the US government, and US supported universities, researching and constructing things. GPS, which is used world-wide these days, is
still maintained by the US government using US tax money (you're welcome). Competitors to that system like GLONASS and the EU Galileo systems are likewise created, built, and supported by governments, not private charities. Sure, you could argue that GLONASS and GPS
had to come out of governments (militaries, actually) but surely once the utility of such a system is apparent some private company would offer the service...? Except the EU is doing it as a joint venture between governments, Galileo is not a private company. On the medical front, the reason stem cell and cloning research in the US came to a screeching near-halt is because so damn much medical research relies in part or in whole on government grants - US private industry isn't that interested in the research end of a lot of subjects, preferring to sponge off government work. Sure, things may be different elsewhere, but as far as research in the US goes, the private industries, universities, and government have all been in bed with each other for decades. Major US universities were given the land they stand on by the US government, places like the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (these are called "land grant" colleges, there are over 70 of them)
So, while your arguments have
some merit on some points your views are extreme and don't take into account some realities. In the UK most research may indeed be funded by private sources but in the US that is not the case. Private charities are, of course, free to fund whatever they want, and they certainly do so, but few private groups command the resources of a large government. If you want to limit your discussion to just the UK, fine, but I was under the impression you were speaking in a more generalized sense.