Adrian Wooldridge is the global business columnist at Bloomberg Opinion. Previously, he worked for the Economist for thirty-two years, including stints as its Lexington, Schumpeter and Bagehot columnist. He earned a doctorate in history from Oxford University, where he was a Fellow of All Souls College. He is the author of ten previous books, including Capitalism in America co-written with Alan Greenspan and seven co-written with John Micklethwait- The Wake-Up Call, Th-e Witch Doctors, A Future Perfect, The Company, The Right Nation, God is Back and The Fourth Revolution.
superb ... Wooldridge, the political editor of The Economist, quite
brilliantly evokes the values and manners of the pluto-meritocrats
at the top of society ... They would do well to read Wooldridge's
erudite, thoughtful and magnificently entertaining book. They will
find many uncomfortable truths in it.
*The Times*
Adrian Wooldridge's extraordinary and irresistible history of
meritocracy, The Aristocracy of Talent, describes the repeated
efforts over the centuries to persuade peoples all over the world
to accept the principle and compel society to organize itself on
lines where merit alone, not bloodlines or bank balances, decides
who rules and gets top dollar. ... Throughout, Wooldridge never
loses faith in the principle of meritocracy as the key driver of
modernity ... The Aristocracy of Talent is a serious treat from
first to last. Not the least of its pleasures are the possibilities
of disagreement that it provokes.
*Times Literary Supplement*
This is a blistering and provocative defence of meritocracy - the
single word almost all democratic politicians swear by, but never
debate. Wooldridge, the Economist's political editor, provides an
erudite survey of many cultures over several centuries to remind us
how meritocracy's core idea - that your place in society should be
a reflect of talent and effort, not determined by birth - is both
revolutionary and recent. He sees meritocracy as an organising
ideal rather than something that has been satisfactorily achieved,
and rails against the ability of the privileged to purchase
educational advantage for their children. He deplores too,
outbursts of arrogance from meritocracy's winners.
*New Statesman*
The Aristocracy of Talent is finely constructed: fluent insights
include the importance of Plato's distrust of democracy, on the
grounds that it tended to lead to tyranny, and his insistence on
the need for a leadership of experts.
*Financial Times*
In The Aristocracy of Talent, the Economist writer Adrian
Wooldridge defends the meritocratic ideal. The book offers a
sweeping account of the history of meritocracy, from the elaborate
exams required to join the Chinese civil service to the problems
with our dysfunctional present version of meritocracy, which
Wooldridge says might be better called "pluto-meritocracy".
Essential reading for anyone who wants to understand one of the
important problems facing rich nations.
*The Times Book of the Year*
This masterly book offers a robust defence of meritocracy.
*Economist*
hugely stimulating ... a spirited defence ... of meritocracy
itself, made with cogent arguments ... a valuable,
thought-provoking book
*Daily Telegraph*
a timely book that is a reminder that meritocracy, for all its
flaws, may well be, like the democracy it has sometimes served,
better than the alternatives ... told with a wealth of erudition in
brisk and readable prose
*Literary Review*
There are few terms whose origins are more misunderstood than
"meritocracy". So Adrian Wooldridge has performed a public service
with his latest book, The Aristocracy of Talent.
*Sunday Times*
Adrian Wooldridge sees meritocracy as a revolutionary idea worth
improving, not abandoning. He ranges across two and a half thousand
years of history, surveying many societies and cultures, to remind
us that until relatively recently the talented were almost always a
matter of no interest to the rulers - not only unrewarded but
undiscovered ... [a] rich stew of a book. Alongside the
philosophers are innumerable politicians, theologians, scientists,
academics, authors and campaigners. He has dug up a priceless array
of quotes from all perspectives on how to define the best people,
how to seek them out, how to educate them, how to test them, how to
give them power, even how they should behave.
*New Statesman*
In this elegant historical and philosophical defence of the notion
that people should advance according to talent rather than birth,
Wooldridge argues that the idea that ruled the world by the late
20th century has become corrupted. This "golden ticket to
prosperity" needs restoring in order to revive social mobility.
*Financial Times*
an omniscient and impassioned polemic ... Some of us have been
waiting a long time for someone to do what Wooldridge has done:
nail the lie that there is something shameful about success
honestly earned
*The Critic*
The Aristocracy of Talent is both an exhaustively researched
history of an idea and a many-sided examination of the impacts of
its imperfect execution.
*Strategy + Business*
A worthy successor to the 1958 classic The Rise of the Meritocracy,
this sparkling study shows how much less meritocratic our society
has become since then
*Daily Telegraph Books of the Year*
Wooldridge has written one of the great books of the decade. Here,
meticulously researched and in arresting prose, are definitive
accounts of Plato's authoritarian philosophy and the way later
generations interpreted it, of China's mandarinate, of the rise of
IQ tests and much else.
*Conservative Home*
with its remorseless erudition ... in his new book, Adrian
Wooldridge tries to salvage meritocracy from the ossified
over-class that Aldous Huxley foresaw.
*Financial Times*
Adrian Wooldridge relabels the system "pluto-meritocracy" to expose
its sham ideology
*The Times*
readable and wide-ranging...Wooldridge maintains that meritocracy
is revolutionary and egalitarian
*BBC History Magazine*
Every page, there's an intriguing nugget of information.
*Robbie Millen*
kudos to Adrian Wooldridge... for producing a full-throated defence
of the principle
*Spectator*
An elegant defence of talent.
*The Week*
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