One Human Minute (1986)
Context: The book does not contain “everything about the human being,” because that is impossible. The largest libraries in the world do not contain “everything.” The quantity of anthropological data discovered by scientists now exceeds any individual’s ability to assimilate it. The division of labor, including intellectual labor, begun thirty thousand years ago in the Paleolithic, has become an irreversible phenomenon, and there is nothing that can be done about it. Like it or not, we have placed our destiny in the hands of the experts. A politician is, after all, a kind of expert, if self-styled. Even the fact that competent experts must serve under politicians of mediocre intelligence and little foresight is a problem that we are stuck with, because the experts themselves cannot agree on any major world issue. A logocracy of quarreling experts might be no better than the rule of the mediocrities to which we are subject. The declining intellectual quality of political leadership is the result of the growing complexity of the world. Since no one, be he endowed with the highest wisdom, can grasp it in its entirety, it is those who are least bothered by this who strive for power.
“Experts must read the patterns and judge their usefulness as evidence. Under any of numerous pressures, an expert may wish to misread a pattern or even to alter it. Americans had a touching trust in "experts."”
Krait musing about fingerprints
Source: The Good Guy (2007), Chapter 21, p. 147
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Dean Koontz 157
American author 1945Related quotes
“In science… the ultimate judges are not experts but experiments.”
Source: Longing for the Harmonies: Themes and Variations from Modern Physics (1987), Ch.13 Light as Lumps
“Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken.”
A Fresh Look at Empiricism: 1927-42 (1996), p. 281
Attributed from posthumous publications
“If an expert says it can't be done, get another expert.”
As quoted in Words from the Wise : Over 6,000 of the Smartest Things Ever Said (2007) by Rosemarie Jarski, p. 170
“Clarke's Fourth Law: For every expert there is an equal and opposite expert.”
Profiles of the Future (1999, London: Victor Gollancz) p. 143
On Clarke's Laws
“A leader must have the courage to act against an expert's advice.”
The Harvard Business Review (1 November 1986)
Post-Prime Ministerial
“Experts have
their expert fun
ex cathedra
telling one
just how nothing
can be done.”
Experts
Grooks