luiz said:
This is precisely the reason why so many people hate intellectuals. They[the intellectuals] like to pretend that they care for the "little men", but at ALL opportunities like to point out how only the "educated elite" knows better what path to follow, how the "ignorant masses" are unable to vote properly and other BS like that.
The thing is, beign a college professor says nothing of one's intelligence. There are many college professors who are complete imbeciles and contribute nothing to society. I have met illiterate people who were smarter then some of my professors at the University.
Furthermore, there is no objective way to determine one's intelligence. IQ tests suck, as do all similars. The group who decides how the tests would be would ultimately decide who votes and who doesn't, and that's tyranny. I could make a test based on Maths that would classify brilliant Lawyers as complete idiots.
And I say more. Knowledge is not concentrated in a group, it is divided among all members of society and it's impossible to objectively determine who holds more usefull knowldge from a political standpoint.
The "ignorant masses" are as intelligence as any one of us, and they have the obligation of knowing what's best for them. We(university educated people) don't have the right to rule their lifes.
I find myself in total agreement with you.
Betazed said:
(c) I have seen in my personal experience (and this can be verified by most people on this forum who are more educated than I am) that if a person is truly educated he is pretty much aware of a vast range of subjects. So a theoritical physicist who is any good would probably be able to carry on an intelligent conversation about economics. Vice versa, an economist who is any good can pretty much carry on an intelligent conversation of physics.
There is no reason whatsoever why a theoretical physicist should know much about economics. That's like saying your average politician knows about physics.
I think the point where we disagree with each other is this:
You think college professors are smarter than normal people.
I think that while, on average they most certainly are, there are too many exceptions to justify giving them additional votes.
You think that being smart automatically means they are more likely to make an informed choice.
I think that, as above, this may be usually true, there are just too many exceptions.
What if someone was smart, but wanted to be a plumber? Plumbers don't need fancy education, so he wouldn't need a degree. Remember, education is as much due to whether someone actually wants it or needs it for their job as it is down to intelligence.
The only way to effectively judge someones ability should be based on intelligence, and not education. And since determining someone's intelligence is next to impossible without mind-reading abilities like, say a betazoid

, the system would be very unfair and inefficient, for luiz's reasons, so until we discover a way to reliably find someone's intelligence a one man one vote system is far more effective and fair.