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	<title>Comments on: This disease of credential inflation seems to be serious</title>
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		<title>By: Kirk</title>
		<link>https://www.isegoria.net/2018/05/this-disease-of-credential-inflation-seems-to-be-serious/comment-page-1/#comment-2631503</link>
		<dc:creator>Kirk</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 18 May 2018 05:07:45 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[This is pretty much in complete keeping with Korean culture, which has always venerated scholarship and learning. Practical things...? Not so much; they don&#039;t have a tremendous amount of respect, in cultural terms, for the tradesman or merchant. The Koreans have always been credentialists, same as the Chinese: So long as you mouthed the right words, and said the right things about Confucian precepts, you were in. All that&#039;s changed is that instead of Confucianism, it&#039;s now more sciencey and about getting things done than studying what Confucius had to say on an issue.

Don&#039;t make the mistake of thinking, however, that any of this &quot;science&quot; crap is deeply rooted in the culture. The thing that&#039;s rooted deeply is the veneration for scholarship and knowledge; they&#039;re not practical or pragmatic in a lot of fundamental ways. All that has really changed is which dry, dead tome they&#039;re using to read out of. At the root of it all is still that same urge that drove the mandarins in China--Veneration of process over achievement. Which is why you see so much scientific fraud coming out of the Chinese and Korean research universities.

And, of course, we&#039;re following them down that same rathole, mostly at the behest of the cultural Marxists we&#039;ve given free rein to in our educational system.]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This is pretty much in complete keeping with Korean culture, which has always venerated scholarship and learning. Practical things&#8230;? Not so much; they don&#8217;t have a tremendous amount of respect, in cultural terms, for the tradesman or merchant. The Koreans have always been credentialists, same as the Chinese: So long as you mouthed the right words, and said the right things about Confucian precepts, you were in. All that&#8217;s changed is that instead of Confucianism, it&#8217;s now more sciencey and about getting things done than studying what Confucius had to say on an issue.</p>
<p>Don&#8217;t make the mistake of thinking, however, that any of this &#8220;science&#8221; crap is deeply rooted in the culture. The thing that&#8217;s rooted deeply is the veneration for scholarship and knowledge; they&#8217;re not practical or pragmatic in a lot of fundamental ways. All that has really changed is which dry, dead tome they&#8217;re using to read out of. At the root of it all is still that same urge that drove the mandarins in China&#8211;Veneration of process over achievement. Which is why you see so much scientific fraud coming out of the Chinese and Korean research universities.</p>
<p>And, of course, we&#8217;re following them down that same rathole, mostly at the behest of the cultural Marxists we&#8217;ve given free rein to in our educational system.</p>
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