Smelly Swiss Dilettante

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loutfard
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Joined: Fri Jan 13, 2023 6:14 pm

Re: Smelly Swiss Dilettante

Post by loutfard »

One more person here to hope you got the job you wanted!

7Wannabe5
Posts: 10739
Joined: Fri Oct 18, 2013 9:03 am

Re: Smelly Swiss Dilettante

Post by 7Wannabe5 »

I think with academic families it's not just a matter of favors traded. There's also a great deal of nurture, and likely some nature (IQ is known to be at least somewhat heritable, although also sporty), and don't forget inter-marriage. There's also overlap with arts community and civil service community. IOW, the entire Gentry Ladder or as David Brooks described, Snobby Elite (as opposed to Sleazy Elite.) The Tech community seems to be positioned midway between the Snobby and Sleazy Elite. Although, if I think about the families I know of that have been on the Gentry Ladder in the U.S since before 1900, location will also influence outcome to a fairly significant degree. For example, San Francisco vs. Lawrence vs. Detroit vs. Austin.

Approximately 2% of the U.S. population has a PhD, JD, or MD. , so even in a multi-generational slacker-with-high-test-scores family like mine, you will likely see a concentration at one degree of separation. Although, I think there may be a growing tendency for those in younger generations to float around on experience, skills, connections, or maybe even "vibes" more than credentials.

zbigi
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Joined: Fri Oct 30, 2020 2:04 pm

Re: Smelly Swiss Dilettante

Post by zbigi »

From what I'm seeing, in STEM fields, a lot of US professors are immigrants, mostly from Asia. Looks like a lof of them got the job on merit. It may be different in non-STEM though, where no hard truth is to be found and thus cultural capital is much more important.

delay
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Joined: Fri Dec 16, 2022 9:21 am
Location: Netherlands, EU

Re: Smelly Swiss Dilettante

Post by delay »

zbigi wrote:
Mon Jun 23, 2025 8:46 am
From what I'm seeing, in STEM fields, a lot of US professors are immigrants, mostly from Asia. Looks like a lof of them got the job on merit. It may be different in non-STEM though, where no hard truth is to be found and thus cultural capital is much more important.
Can't disagree there! Jacob was listing factors "ceteris paribus" (all else being equal.) Asian professors come with a flow of lucrative foreign students which is another form of "merit".
7Wannabe5 wrote:
Mon Jun 23, 2025 7:23 am
I think with academic families it's not just a matter of favors traded. There's also a great deal of nurture, and likely some nature (IQ is known to be at least somewhat heritable, although also sporty), and don't forget inter-marriage. There's also overlap with arts community and civil service community.
That sounds like a better description than mine! The higher level academics were proportionally much more into arts than the lower level academics.

Then you had this Russian postgrad who said the candidate with the most beautiful wife would be the next professor. He was often right :lol:

7Wannabe5
Posts: 10739
Joined: Fri Oct 18, 2013 9:03 am

Re: Smelly Swiss Dilettante

Post by 7Wannabe5 »

@delay:

Yeah, I think John Adams mostly got it right, and this also obviously somewhat applies to the ERE progression, even though our brave leader is a bit "bah, humbug" on the value of arts/humanities education ;) . Although, at this juncture in history, maybe "meta-crisis" and "systems science" and/or "meditation" and "holism" would transcend Adams' Early Neo-Renaissance-Modern Era list.
I must study politics and war that my sons may have liberty to study mathematics and philosophy. My sons ought to study mathematics and philosophy, geography, natural history, naval architecture, navigation, commerce and agriculture in order to give their children a right to study painting, poetry, music, architecture, statuary, tapestry, and porcelain
delay wrote:Then you had this Russian postgrad who said the candidate with the most beautiful wife would be the next professor. He was often right :lol:
Yes, although it's likely more correlation or indirect causation than direct causation. An ambitions NT intellectual might be better off with an NF or even SF partner because they would be differently ambitious and/or bring different skills to the collaboration. ENTPs often hold intermediary roles, because we lack the focus/discipline of a scientist or an artist, but have the ability to speak their languages as well as often holding some practical fluency in "commerce" or "tech" or similar. For example, having enough commerce/tech skills to own/operate a printing press was a perfect generalist position/profession for an ENTP like Benjamin Franklin. And this is towards why the eNTPs on this forum tend towards their own flavor of Semi-ERE. This is also why the internet has difficulty deciding whether to classify John Adams as an INTJ or an ENTP, but I believe his tendency to impose hierarchy upon the generalist spectrum is clearly more indicative of iNTj. Also, the fact that he mostly stuck with Abigail rather than totally running rogue in Paris like old eNTP Ben.

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