How would you feel if an idea that captured your imagination and became a rock in the base of your personal philosophy turned out to have originated as a bad example? Or worse, a sarcastic joke? These things happen. We've seen it in the past few years, as people gather in places like 4chan and compete to see who can make the most people believe the most outrageous conspiracy theories. But an idea doesn't have to be all that outrageous for people to make it a long-lasting thing. Take the idea of "meritocracy." It has the same Greek suffix as democracy, theocracy, etc. so we can tell the word means political power based on merit, or ability and talent instead of wealth or social class. Sounds like a good idea, right? But the word was coined by sociologist Michael Dunlop, who wrote a dystopian book about a meritocracy in 1958 in which students were tested and assigned their life's role by their score. It was meant to be a nightmare.
Read about the satirical origins of meritocracy, along with Daylight Saving Time, Schrödinger’s cat, Hitler’s Nobel Peace Prize nomination, and the Trolley Problem, which was proposed in 1967 in an argument about abortion, of all things, at Cracked.
(Image credit: McGeddon)
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I have always hated the false dichotomy of the Trolly Problem. This puts it into the original perspective and I really appreciate that.
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