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The Death of Expertise: The Campaign against Established Knowledge and Why it Matters 1st Edition

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 2,844 ratings

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Technology and increasing levels of education have exposed people to more information than ever before. These societal gains, however, have also helped fuel a surge in narcissistic and misguided intellectual egalitarianism that has crippled informed debates on any number of issues. Today, everyone knows everything: with only a quick trip through WebMD or Wikipedia, average citizens believe themselves to be on an equal intellectual footing with doctors and diplomats. All voices, even the most ridiculous, demand to be taken with equal seriousness, and any claim to the contrary is dismissed as undemocratic elitism.

Tom Nichols'
The Death of Expertise shows how this rejection of experts has occurred: the openness of the internet, the emergence of a customer satisfaction model in higher education, and the transformation of the news industry into a 24-hour entertainment machine, among other reasons. Paradoxically, the increasingly democratic dissemination of information, rather than producing an educated public, has instead created an army of ill-informed and angry citizens who denounce intellectual achievement. When ordinary citizens believe that no one knows more than anyone else, democratic institutions themselves are in danger of falling either to populism or to technocracy or, in the worst case, a combination of both. An update to the 2017breakout hit, the paperback edition of The Death of Expertise provides a new foreword to cover the alarming exacerbation of these trends in the aftermath of Donald Trump's election. Judging from events on the ground since it first published, The Death of Expertise issues a warning about the stability and survival of modern democracy in the Information Age that is even more important today.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Selected as an Amazon Best Nonfiction Books of 2017.

Named one of Politico's Top 50 2017 Shortlisted for Physics World's Book of the Year 2017.

"Nichols expands his 2014 article published by The Federalist with a highly researched and impassioned book that's well timed for this post-election period. Strongly researched textbook for laymen will have many political and news junkies nodding their heads in agreement." -- Publishers Weekly
host of reasons. Here is a book that not only acknowledges this reality, but takes it head on. Persuasive and well-written,
The Death of Expertise is exactly the book needed for our times." -- Ian Bremmer, President and Founder, Eurasia Group

"Americans are indifferent to real journalism in forming their opinions, hoaxes prove harder to kill than a slasher-flick monster, and the word 'academic' is often hurled like a nasty epithet. Tom Nichols has put his finger on what binds these trends together: positive hostility to established knowledge. The Death of Expertise is trying to turn back this tide." -- Dan Murphy, former Middle East and Southeast Asia Bureau Chief, The Christian Science Monitor


"Tom Nichols has written a brilliant, timely, and very original book. He shows how the digital revolution, social media, and the internet has helped to foster a cult of ignorance. Nichols makes a compelling case for reason and rationality in our public and political discourse." -- Robert J. Lieber, Georgetown University, and author of
Retreat and Its Consequences

"Tom Nichols does a breathtakingly detailed job in scrutinizing the American consumer's refutation of traditional expertise. In the era of escapism and denial, he offers a refreshing and timely book on how we balance our skepticism with trust going forward." -- Salena Zito, national political reporter for The Washington Examiner, CNN, The New York Post, and RealClearPolitics

"Timely useful...in providing an overview of just how we arrived at this distressing state of affairs." -- New York Times

"This may sound like a rant you have heard before, but Nichols has a sense of humour and chooses his examples well. His anger is a lot more attractive than the standard condescension." -- Financial Times
"A genial guide through the wilderness of ignorance." --
Kirkus Reviews
"Nichols is a forceful and sometimes mordant commentator, with an eye for the apt analogy." --
Inside Higher Education
"Excellent...makes important points and offers valuable insight, particularly when it comes to the role of the internet and social media in our political environment...essential reading for anyone interested in this pressing subject." --
The Washington Post

"This may sound like a rant you have heard before, but Nichols has a sense of humour and chooses his examples well. His anger is a lot more attractive than the standard condescension. The tricky bit, of course, is what to do about this mess. Here, Nichols can say little more than what sensible people always have. Citizens - now so proudly ill-informed that they cannot even make use of expert opinion in fulfilling their civic role - must rediscover a sense of responsibility. " -- Financial Times

"Nichols' perspective is an essential one if we are to begin digging ourselves out of the hole we find ourselves in." -- NPR

"Makes a powerful and compelling argument." -- PennLive

"If you're looking for last-minute holiday gift ideas, Nichols's The Death of Expertise is one of my favorite books of 2017." -- John Gruber, Daring Fireball

"Extremely timely...for those wary of being at the mercy of the ignorant and ill-informed and their "enablers," these are troubleing times. But Nichols concludes his book on a surprisingly optimistic note. Let's hope he's right." -- Toronto Star

"Highly readable and entertaining." -- Weekly Standard

"Tom Nichols is fighting a rear-guard action on behalf of those dangerous people who actually know what they are talking about. In a compelling, and often witty, polemic, he explores why experts are routinely disregarded and what might be done to get authoritative knowledge taken more seriously." -- Sir Lawrence Freedman, Emeritus Professor of War Studies, King's College London, and author of Strategy

Book Description

A penetrating exploration of the rise of anti-expert and anti-intellectual sentiment in the United States

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Oxford University Press; 1st edition (March 1, 2017)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Pocket Book ‏ : ‎ 272 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0190469412
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0190469412
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.31 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 8.4 x 1 x 5.6 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 2,844 ratings

About the author

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Thomas M. Nichols
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Tom Nichols is a contributing writer at The Atlantic. He was a professor of national security affairs for 25 years at the U.S. Naval War College, and is the author of The Death of Expertise (Oxford 2017) as well as books on Russia, the Cold War, nuclear weapons, and the future of armed conflict. He is also an instructor at the Harvard Extension School and an adjunct professor at the US Air Force School of Strategic Force Studies. He is a former aide in the U.S. Senate and has been a Fellow of the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.

He is also a Senior Associate of the Carnegie Council on Ethics and International Affairs in New York City, a Fellow of the International History Institute at Boston University, and a Senior Fellow of the Graham Center for Contemporary International History at the University of Toronto. Previously he was a Fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, DC.

In 2017 Tom was named one of POLITICO Magazine's "POLITICO 50," the thinkers whose ideas are shaking up American politics and public life.

Tom is also a five-time undefeated Jeopardy! champion. He played in the 1994 Tournament of Champions, is listed in the Jeopardy! Hall of Fame, and as one of the game's top players was invited to participate in the 2005 Ultimate Tournament of Champions, where he played his final match.

Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
2,844 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the book well-written and refreshing. They say it presents an important discussion with valuable thoughts and insights. Readers describe the book as timely and crucial. Opinions are mixed on the pacing, with some finding it compelling and sobering, while others say it's repetitive.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

154 customers mention "Readability"147 positive7 negative

Customers find the book well-written, refreshing, and informative. They also describe it as entertaining, easy to read, and riveting. Readers mention it would be great for a book club.

"...A very solid read, my only disappointment besides the lack of supplementary material is the fact that climate change played a miniscule role...." Read more

"I waver on this one between four and five stars. Nichols can write well, and his thesis is quite reasonable, but I would also like more rigorous..." Read more

"...This book is well written, insightful, and encouraging, and I highly recommend it to all." Read more

"...Now what?All in all, “the Death of Expertise” is an interesting read, but you might have to adjust your political filters to get the..." Read more

138 customers mention "Thought provoking"107 positive31 negative

Customers find the book thought-provoking. They say the thesis is reasonable and the book is scholarly. Readers also mention the book provides excellent arguments for listening to experts.

"...Tom Nichols provides excellent arguments for listening to experts rather than deriding and denigrating them...." Read more

"...Nichols can write well, and his thesis is quite reasonable, but I would also like more rigorous comparisons of Americans throughout the years to..." Read more

"“The Death of Expertise” by Tom Nichols is a thought-provoking book that sheds light on an important issue in today's society...." Read more

"...Still, this is a book that is going to be very helpful for apologists...." Read more

23 customers mention "Timing"23 positive0 negative

Customers find the book timely, important, and well-written. They say it's fast-paced and has a crucial message.

"...This is a timely and important message, especially given the current political climate...." Read more

"...A sincere THANK YOU, Tom Nichols, for your timely, most interesting, scholarly, conversational, and enjoyable work!!" Read more

"Nichols wrote a most timely book. Given our inabbility to even agree what "facts" are, this read is a good description of how we got to this point...." Read more

"...Timely, relevant and "required reading" for SMEs dealing with current environment of "everyone thinks baseless opinions matters."..." Read more

14 customers mention "Interest"14 positive0 negative

Customers find the book intellectually stimulating, entertaining, and gripping. They say it raises good arguments and is a great potential conversation starter. Readers also mention the author does an excellent job of bringing up stories and producing reasons for expertise.

"...3. Some repetition.In summary, this is a fun social study book about the relationship between experts and citizens in the democracy, and..." Read more

"...Nichols does an excellent job of bringing up stories, and producing reasons that expertise could be less valued now than before, but I was..." Read more

"...Overall, it’s an interesting book that is a great potential conversation starter...." Read more

"...time and for the first few chapters, it seems on point, raising very good arguments that I will put in my satchel of rebuttals every time some..." Read more

31 customers mention "Pacing"16 positive15 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book. Some mention it's compelling, provocative, and unsettling. Others say the material within the chapters is repetitive and rambling.

"...Overall, Nichols makes a compelling and sobering case about the problems with hostility to experts that should encourage any reader to be more humble..." Read more

"...I've seen it. I found the book a bit redundant, but I did like it. It's not an easy read, but I think it's worthwhile...." Read more

"...The book's premise is good. Unfortunately, its treatment of that premise is lacking." Read more

"...as I read Nichols’ book, I found myself increasingly alarmed, irritated, and at times outright offended by his elitism, his refusal to approach..." Read more

7 customers mention "Elitism"0 positive7 negative

Customers find the author's elitism annoying and offending. They say he comes across as condescending and arrogant. Readers also mention the lack of respect and dishonesty. They also say the argument is poorly reasoned and difficult to define.

"...myself increasingly alarmed, irritated, and at times outright offended by his elitism, his refusal to approach his subject critically, and his..." Read more

"...pass to become citizens speaks volumes about how poorly reasoned his argument actually remains...." Read more

"...author says in the very beginning of his book, it is difficult to define what an expert is...." Read more

"...a poster-child for the elitist intellectual set, at times coming across as condescending, and even arrogant...." Read more

A book on an important subject, that gets most everything wrong.
2 out of 5 stars
A book on an important subject, that gets most everything wrong.
In 2017 Tom Nichols, a professor of National Security Affairs at the U.S. Naval War College and Adjunct Professor at the Harvard Extension School, published The Death of Expertise with Oxford University Press. This book is a call to action, a warning that “everyone is drowning in data,” which is a problem because, as Nichols argues, citizens lack the capacity to separate good data from bad, to evaluate truth versus fiction, or to even understand the depths of their own ignorance (Nichols, 143). This is a problem, because it is “ignorant narcissism for laypeople to believe that they can maintain a large and advanced nation without listening to the voices of those who are more educated and experienced than themselves” (Nichols, 208). Thus, Nichols points to a collapse in expertise among those who hold university degrees, while highlighting the much bigger problem of the widespread denigration of experts among the public that may lead to a collapse of society. As an expert in history–I have a Ph.D. from the University of Tennessee–with more than 20 years of experience teaching, I agree with Nichols on his fears about the lack of respect for expertise in our the U.S., but I’m saddened by his inability to recognize how we got here.To start with, I’ve tried to separate my personal feelings from my analysis of this book. I was eager to read The Death of Expertise because of my personal encounters with those who don’t understand or value expertise. I’ve also watched the problem play out in the public sphere with a great deal of trepidation. However, as I read Nichols’ book, I found myself increasingly alarmed, irritated, and at times outright offended by his elitism, his refusal to approach his subject critically, and his unwillingness to follow his own advice about how to understand the world. I found myself having to step back and ask myself if I was reacting to his book out of my feelings of anger and being personally affronted, or if it was because of anything wrong with the book. After careful consideration, I decided it’s genuinely because this is a bad book. That’s unfortunate, because Nichols makes some good points, but these are drowned out by his poor use of evidence–in most cases his lack of evidence–and the biases he wears on his sleave.So why is this book problematic? The first two chapters are on “Experts and Citizens” and “How Conversation Becomes Exhausting,” which I often found myself nodding along to. However, as an expert at critical analysis–I’ve written dozens or hundreds of critical reviews of books both in class and for academic journals, not to mention my decades of training and experience applying this skill–I found myself with “a sense that something ‘isn’t right,'” which Nichols points to as a hallmark of someone who combines expertise with experience (Nichols, 33). That led me to pause and think about why, and it immediately became clear. In a section on the “Rise of the Low-Information Voter” Nichols discusses the wildly inflated estimates citizens make for how much foreign aid the U.S. government supplies to other nations (Nichols, 25-28). The problem is in his assertion that this is anything new. I agree with Nichols that specific mistaken beliefs such as this one about foreign aid is a real problem, but he doesn’t even make an effort to provide any evidence that the problem is new. In fact, this section follows another with the subheading, “So it’s Not New. Is it Even a Problem?” But the assertion that there has been a “rise” of the “low-information voter” is an empirical claim that can be tested, yet Nichols provides no evidence that voters in the 21st century know less about foreign aid than those in the mid 20th century or the 19th.This problem of making empirical assertions lacking any evidence runs throughout the book, and frequently lapses into the realm of outright insult. Chapter 3 is devoted to “Higher Education,” with the subheading “The Customer is Always Right.” This chapter takes a multi-pronged approach of attacking students for their laziness, ignorance, and feelings of self entitlement, attacking institutions of higher learning for becoming corrupted by market forces, and attacking faculty for lack of proper expertise. The short version of what Nichols argues in this chapter is that too many students now attend universities, which compete for these students by offering water slides and climbing walls rather than quality education, as well as pressuring faculty to give good grades for limited effort. The faculty themselves are often unprepared to provide a quality education anyway, lacking the expertise necessary to do so even if they wanted to, since so many “generic universities” as Nichols calls them crank out individuals with graduate degrees without the necessary resources (Nichols, 88-95). This chapter is a perfect example of what’s wrong with The Death of Expertise. Nichols supports his assertions with 21 footnotes, and of those only three are from peer-reviewed sources. The rest are a mish-mash of online newspapers, blog posts, and magazine articles. Even those questionable sources provide not a single iota of evidence that any of the issues Nichols points to is new. Do students today learn less than those of the 1960s or 1860s? Are faculty in Nichols’ so-called “generic universities” less good at their jobs than those of elite institutions? Does grade inflation, which is at least a documented issue, indicate that students today are learning less than those of the past?My gut-instinct about that last question is a sold maybe, but as a scholar, I know the problem of working from gut instinct, and Nichols doesn’t bother to even try to provide evidence to support the various claims he makes that any of the issues he sees with modern higher education are in any way new. As Roger L. Geiger explores in American Higher Education Since World War II, the implementation of the G.I. Bill after World War II brought a much higher percentage of men to college than the U.S. had ever seen before. Furthermore, those students were older, more career-oriented than generations past, and this influx had ripple effects as increasing numbers of students were drawn to college. However, in recent decades funding for higher education has been slashed in most states, not only causing students to take on more debt but also to be more likely to have to work part or full time in order to attend college. Thus, students today are more interested in how they will pay off the increasing amount of debt they incur in college, and how the education they’re obtaining will help them in their careers, than students prior to World War II were. But those students were drawn from a much smaller pool of relatively affluent individuals who were less concerned about their futures because many of them could fall back on family wealth. There were certainly fewer of those students who came to college in need of remedial education in math or writing, fewer still with learning disabilities or in need of mental health care, not to mention that minorities had far fewer chances for higher education during what Nichols clearly thinks of as the “good old days” of higher education.Nichols mentions none of those issues. Perhaps he doesn’t because in spite of stating that he comes from a working-class background, he has always either attended or taught at elite institutions, which might mean that he just doesn’t know what students at non-elite schools are like, or what it’s like to teach at one of the “generic universities” he mocks. I guess it’s easier to depend on caricature and cling to elitism than it is to do even the minimal research necessary to learn about schools that aren’t Harvard, the history of education, and any of a number of other points Nichols makes authoritative statements about.Nichols elitism and fondness for the good old days regularly gets in the way of his understanding of the problem he writes about. For example, in chapter 4, “Let me Google that For You,” he spends considerable time discussing the information about quack cures and misinformation found on the internet. Those are real problems, but Nichols again fails to acknowledge that people have always had a weakness for quackery. From the use of magical talismans in the middle ages to the tonics and elixirs of the 19th and 20th century (or today for that matter), quack treatments have always been big sellers, as detailed by historians such as Roy Porter whose Quacks: Fakers and Charlatans in Medicine could have disabused Nichols of the notion that the modern penchant to turn to questionable medical “treatments” is in any way new.However, it’s chapter 5 on “The ‘New’ New Journalism” where Nichols really trips over his own elitism. He regularly tosses around empirical statements with no support, such as “not only do people know less about the world around them, they are less interested in it,” meaning less than people of some undefined past period I presume, but Nichols doesn’t tell us who he’s comparing people today to, or what evidence there is that modern people are any more ignorant than those of some undefined past (Nichols, 137). Far worse, though is when he complains about celebrity news crowding out more important stories. As with much of this book, there is a kernel of truth in Nichols’ complaint that the past presence of expert gatekeepers who decided what counted as news “wasn’t entirely a bad thing” (Nichols, 141). However, his nostalgia for a period when “the public saw the world as it was viewed by the corporations who ran the networks” is eye-popping (Nichols, 141). Take the “me too” movement as only one example of an issue ignored by these corporations of the past. It wasn’t that powerful men weren’t committing sexual assault and harassment in the past, it was just that news organization prior to the late 20th and early 21st century ignored this problem. Or what about the issue of police brutality against African Americans? For most of American history, this issue was most often ignored or seen as no problem at all. Maybe Nichols doesn’t think about these things, though, because he’s not a historian– and it shows. It’s hard not to snort when he waxes nostalgic about the good old days of the news if one knows anything at all about the history of yellow journalism.None of this is meant to indicate that Nichols isn’t pointing to a real problem in America today. Too often both citizens and policy makers ignore or outright attack expertise, and this problem is demonstrably worse today than it was in the past. Nichols sometimes gets the reasons right, such as when he discusses the rise of people such as Rush Limbaugh or organizations such as Fox News. However, he completely ignores the larger problem of corporations actively funding propaganda against climate change and the experts who do scientific work in this field, religious organizations that attack science relating to gay rights or birth control and the experts who work on related topics, or the right-wing politicians who promote these forms of propaganda. That last point gets to the heart of why this book fails on so many different levels to live up to its promise. Nichols doesn’t want to discuss the role of conservatives who attack expertise. Whether this is because of his personal political convictions or because Oxford University Press doesn’t want to alienate those readers, this is a regrettable oversight. Given the large number of empirical claims that lack any evidentiary base, it’s even more regrettable that this book passed the muster of peer review, and that Oxford chose to publish it.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on April 9, 2017
Every American citizen should read this book.

Tom Nichols provides excellent arguments for listening to experts rather than deriding and denigrating them. The modern world is complex enough that no one person will have the knowledge required to be expert in all areas. Thus experts are needed, and their roles should be lauded, not decried. That having been said, one still needs to be wary of those claiming to be experts. Not everyone so claiming is in fact an expert.

The book comprises 9 chapters:

Introduction

1. Experts and Citizens -- Introduces and expands upon the concept of an expert.

2. How Conversations Became Exhausting -- Discusses the challenges of holding intelligent discussions today (and notes the futility of trying to discuss matters with a conspiracist - he likens conversation with a conspiracist to "a treadmill of nonsense that can exhaust even the most tenacious teacher.") Also differentiates between stereotypes and generalizations, and discusses the pitfalls of discussion and debate.

3. Higher Education: The Customer Is Always Right -- Discusses the undesirable effects of colleges and universities having to accede to students as clients or customers rather than emphasizing educational aspects. Basically, there is a balance to be achieved here, and it should not be in the direction of easier grades.

4. Let Me Google That For You: How Unlimited Information Is Making Us Dumber -- Addresses the hazards of relying on the Internet for facts, let alone knowledge (which are two different things, as Nichols notes). Nichols cites Surgeon's Law: "Ninety percent of everything is crap." That includes things on the Internet, and Nichols thinks that estimate may be "lowballing."

5. The New "New" Journalism, and Lots of It -- Discusses the changes in media reliability created by pressure to provide more entertainment than news, and the resultant lowering of the bar for what really constitutes news. In addition, the abundance of unreliable news coupled with the pressures of time have reduced journalistic reliability. As Nichols notes, "More of everything does not mean more quality in everything. (Sturgeon's Law is incapable everywhere.)"

6. When the Experts are Wrong -- Discusses the ways in which experts may be wrong, from making simple honest errors to trying to claim expertise outside their given field (see the cases detailed in Merchants of Doubt, for instance) to actually lying about their expertise. Nichols also discusses the harm to society resulting from such errors, particularly from false experts.

Conclusion: Experts and Democracy -- Nichols notes that, "Expertise and government rely upon each other, particularly in a democracy." When one goes bad, so does the other, and the two are then caught in a "death spiral." Basically, Nichols is pessimistic about the outcome, about stopping the death spiral. He notes, "Most causes of ignorance can be overcome, if people are willing to learn. Nothing, however, can overcome the toxic confluence of arrogance, narcissism, and cynicism that Americans now wear like full suit of armor against experts and professionals."

Perhaps not. Or perhaps a growing self-awareness of the problems might help individuals to break out of the death spiral. It can only be hoped that individuals reading Tom Nichols' excellent book will come to the realization that the current trend must be halted. That is why it should be required reading.

Note: With regard to one reviewer's complaint that climate change is not addressed by Nichols, that omission really is unimportant for the purposes of this book. Nichols addresses the idea of expertise more generally. If one is interested in a detailed examination of the efforts to discredit scientific conclusions regarding climate change, see Naomi Oreskes and Erik M. Conway's Merchants of Doubt: How a Handful of Scientists Obscured the Truth on Issues from Tobacco Smoke to Global Warming (https://www.amazon.com/Merchants-Doubt-Handful-Scientists-Obscured/dp/1608193942), which thoroughly details the specific tactics of fear, uncertainty, and doubt (FUD) employed first by the tobacco industry and later by the climate change deniers.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 21, 2017
The Death of Expertise: The Campaign Against Established Knowledge and Why it Matters by Tom Nichols

“The Death of Expertise” is an intellectually stimulating book that looks at how a movement of ignorance has threatened our ability to rely on expertise. Professor Tom Nichols takes the reader on a journey that shows that not only have we dismissed expertise we are now proud of our own ignorance. This interesting 272-page book includes the following six chapters: 1. Experts and Citizens, 2. How Conversation Became Exhausting, 3. Higher Education: The Customer Is Always Right, 4. Let Me Google That for You: How Unlimited Information Is Making Us Dumber, 5. The “New” New Journalism, and Lots of It, and 6. When the Experts Are Wrong.

Positives:
1. A well written, and engaging book.
2. An interesting and timely topic, the campaign against established knowledge in the hands of a perceptive author. He’s also fair and even handed.
3. The book flows nicely. It has a good rhythm and it’s fun to read. Each chapter begins with a chapter-appropriate quote. “There is a cult of ignorance in the United States, and there always has been. The strain of anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that “my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge.”” by Isaac Asimov.
4. Doesn’t waste time in getting to the main point. “The United States is now a country obsessed with the worship of its own ignorance.” “Not only do increasing numbers of laypeople lack basic knowledge, they reject fundamental rules of evidence and refuse to learn how to make a logical argument. In doing so, they risk throwing away centuries of accumulated knowledge and undermining the practices and habits that allow us to develop new knowledge.”
5. Provides many examples of ignorance throughout the book. “The antics of clownish antivaccine crusaders like actors Jim Carrey and Jenny McCarthy undeniably make for great television or for a fun afternoon of reading on Twitter. But when they and other uninformed celebrities and public figures seize on myths and misinformation about the dangers of vaccines, millions of people could once again be in serious danger from preventable afflictions like measles and whooping cough.”
6. Many factoids spruced throughout the book. “The CDC issued a report in 2012 that noted that raw dairy products were 150 times more likely than pasteurized products to cause food-borne illness.”
7. In defense of experts. “Put another way, experts are the people who know considerably more on a subject than the rest of us, and are those to whom we turn when we need advice, education, or solutions in a particular area of human knowledge.”
8. Explains a prevailing phenomenon, the Dunning-Kruger Effect. “This phenomenon is called “the Dunning-Kruger Effect,” named for David Dunning and Justin Kruger, the research psychologists at Cornell University who identified it in a landmark 1999 study. The Dunning-Kruger Effect, in sum, means that the dumber you are, the more confident you are that you’re not actually dumb.”
9. Explains the appeal of conspiracies. “More important and more relevant to the death of expertise, however, is that conspiracy theories are deeply attractive to people who have a hard time making sense of a complicated world and who have no patience for less dramatic explanations.”
10. Learn something every day. “Stereotypes are not predictions, they’re conclusions. That’s why it’s called “prejudice”: it relies on pre-judging.”
11. Insightful observations. “The social psychologist Jonathan Haidt summed it up neatly when he observed that when facts conflict with our values, “almost everyone finds a way to stick with their values and reject the evidence.””
12. Explains how colleges and universities have become an important part of the problem. “Still, the fact of the matter is that many of those American higher educational institutions are failing to provide to their students the basic knowledge and skills that form expertise. More important, they are failing to provide the ability to recognize expertise and to engage productively with experts and other professionals in daily life.” “When college is a business, you can’t flunk the customers.”
13. Provides some compelling and constructive criticism of campuses. “When feelings matter more than rationality or facts, education is a doomed enterprise.”
14. The deceiving power of the Internet. “Unfortunately, people thinking they’re smart because they searched the Internet is like thinking they’re good swimmers because they got wet walking through a rainstorm.”
15. The challenges of Wiki-pedia and similar crowd-sourced projects. “Even with the best of intentions, crowd-sourced projects like Wikipedia suffer from an important but often unremarked distinction between laypeople and professionals: volunteers do what interests them at any given time, while professionals employ their expertise every day.”
16. Describes the rise of Rush Limbaugh. “In 2011, Limbaugh referred to “government, academia, science, and the media” as the “four corners of deceit,” which pretty much covered everyone except Limbaugh.”
17. Recommendations on how to be a better consumer of news. “The consumers of news have some important obligations here as well. I have four recommendations for you, the readers, when approaching the news: be humbler, be ecumenical, be less cynical, and be a lot more discriminating.”
18. Provides many examples of when experts get it wrong. “In the 1970s, America’s top nutritional scientists told the United States government that eggs, among many other foods, might be lethal.”
19. Explains the value of science. “But science is a process, not a conclusion. Science subjects itself to constant testing by a set of careful rules under which theories can only be displaced by better theories. Laypeople cannot expect experts never to be wrong; if they were capable of such accuracy, they wouldn’t need to do research and run experiments in the first place. If policy experts were clairvoyant or omniscient, governments would never run deficits and wars would only break out at the instigation of madmen.” “the purpose of science is to explain, not to predict.”
20. The final chapter does a good job of describing the role of experts in democracy. The five misconceptions about experts and policymakers. “First, experts are not puppeteers. They cannot control when leaders take their advice.”
21. The lack of balance. “A talk show, for example, with one scientist who says genetically modified organisms (GMOs) are safe and one activist who says they are dangerous looks “balanced,” but in reality that is ridiculously skewed, because nearly nine out of ten scientists think GMOs are safe for consumption.”

Negatives:
1. I was disappointed that climate change science didn’t play a bigger role in this book.
2. Lacked supplementary material that could have complemented the excellent narrative.
3. Some repetition.

In summary, this is a fun social study book about the relationship between experts and citizens in the democracy, and why that relationship is weakening. Tom Nichols does an excellent job of capturing the key elements to the collapse of our expertise and describes what we can do as citizens to put a stop to it. A very solid read, my only disappointment besides the lack of supplementary material is the fact that climate change played a miniscule role. That said, I recommend it!

Further suggestions: “Anti-Intellectualism in American Life” by Richard Hofstadter, “The War on Science” by Shawn Lawrence Otto, “Not a Scientist: How Politicians Mistake, Misrepresent and Mangle Science” by Dave Levitan, “Denying to the Grave” by Sara E. and Jack M. Gorman, “Everybody Lies” by Seth Stephens-Davidowitz, “Merchants of Doubt” by Naomi Oreskes, “No, Is Not Enough” by Naomi Klein, and “The Republican War on Science” by Chris Mooney.
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Lynette Elstone
5.0 out of 5 stars Great read.
Reviewed in Canada on February 27, 2024
I loved this book. Very interesting and thought provoking.
Jeancarlo.
5.0 out of 5 stars excelente leitura.
Reviewed in Brazil on December 29, 2023
ótima leitura. Tom Nichols foi sublime nesta obra.
Silas Flannery
1.0 out of 5 stars A collection of unfounded opinions, poorly argued and failing to convince
Reviewed in the Netherlands on September 24, 2024
The notion of expertise is not straightforward, as anybody will appreciate who spends a few minutes contemplating this will appreciate. A book analysing that notion, reviewing te status of experts (however defined) through the ages and across diffrenet cultures and sociological settings can provide a better understanding and appreciation of the many aspetcs that make up expertise and its role in society This book, hoever, fails in my opinin to address this coherently or even productively.
The value in this book lies not in the text (which comes a across as a collection of mere opinions) but in reminding the reader that the place of expertise in society is complex and varied. For this reader, Mr Nichols' text shows that he is no expert on the topic of expertise.
Benedict
5.0 out of 5 stars Insight into the history of conspiracy theories
Reviewed in Belgium on July 16, 2024
The book gives insight into the history of conspiracy theories and how and why people believe them. It also offers solutions to the problem of their popularity.
Göran Isacsson
4.0 out of 5 stars Om epistemisk hybris
Reviewed in Sweden on March 30, 2023
Skulle kunna vinna på en update post-Trump.