akwoo, on 2014-June-27, 01:14, said:
First, I think intelligence is something that can be improved with training.
Second, I really think there is no solution (unless you count deciding as a society to limit the technology we will use) that will allow useful employment in large numbers of people not smart enough to be a farmer. If a robot can be programmed to do a job, the robot will be cheaper than any human.
So I think the only possibility is to keep this person in school long enough to get them smart enough to be a farmer. If it takes fifteen years of college, it takes fifteen years. Or we can decide it's not worth it to society to keep trying to educate this person, and that it's better (or at least cheaper) to let them be perpetually dependent. I hope such a decision would be made in recognition of the effects of having a large group of people who are widely regarded, by themselves and everyone else, as people on whom society has given up. (I would hope that, these days, we wouldn't consider just letting this person freeze or starve to death.)
What needs to stop is this business of awarding worthless degrees. All it does is keep people from having an education later on the grounds that, on paper, they already had one.
To begin at the bottom, I enthusiastically agree that this business of phony degrees is a serious problem. Some are more phony than others, but I have seen instances where it's pretty brash.
I also agree that people can learn. We develop our muscles through exercise and we can develop our brains as well. Furthermore, taking some courses in agriculture can provide information, even if it doesn't particularly raise reasoning ability or enhance creativity.
I think where we may, or may not, differ is this: We need to greatly enlarge opportunity for training. This includes college but is by no means limited to college. I have had the great good fortune to make my living in a career that I enjoyed. I'm 75, I am a retired math prof, I am currently working on a math problem with a friend, also retired. No pay, no nothing really, we just enjoy it. But not everyone likes mathematics. Time out for a true story: I was in the barbershop and the barber asked as they do, what I did for a living. "I'm a mathematician," "Oh, I really like mathematics". Not the usual response. He continued "Well, not he hard stuff, like algebra. I really like..." pause for thought "addition. I really like addition." Anyway, I would like to see expanded opportunity for those who not only don't like mathematics but also who are not very academic. This barber's brother owned the shop. I think that they both make a decent living. The barber has a family, owns his house, etc. The owner probably makes a better livingh. I imagine he has some business training. Did he go to college? Beats me.
A farmer today probably needs quite a bit of training that his father would have never heard of.. Sure. So make it available. But going off to a four year college and running up a lot oi debt studying a lot of stuff that is of no interest, maybe we could skip over that.
My own years in college were great. Great for me. I grew up in a neighborhood where my father's eighth grade education was about the norm. Here I was in college reading Aescculus, Dante, Goethe etc and studying mathematics and physics. I thought it was wonderful. But that was me. I am sure that if I ever came home and told my father I was quitting college and was going to become a carpenter like he was he would have told my mother "I was getting worried about the kid, but he has finally come to his senses". My parents were not paying the college bills, so it was completely my choice.
I am not really sure that we disagree. A modern farmer no doubt needs to know a lot of stuff. Soil, business, environmental issues, possibly some legal training. It's so much stuff that maybe a four year college, if it has a good program, is right for a farmer. But others, the barbershop owner for example, needs some business training and some specialized training in styling (not for me, I don't do "styling", my response to "How do you want it cut?" is "Shorter") but for him I think much of college would be, professionally, a waste. If he enjoys it, as I did, then fine. But he may not enjoy it and he may not need it.
My father was born in 1900, a very different era, but even so, as he was reaching retirement, technology was causing issues. The skills you learn when you are 20 may well be outdated when you are 40, or 60. So training and education has to be a lifelong commitment. Both the individual and society has to accept this fact of modern life. A college education, for some, and probably for many, can be part of this. But we need to cast a much larger net.