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The Tyranny of Merit

Michael J. Sandel

9780374911010 Farrar, Straus and Giroux
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A world-famous political philosopher, and the bestselling author of Justice, reveals the driving force behind the resurgence of populism: the tyranny of the meritocracy and the resentments it produces.Our politics are fraught with rancor and resentment. Decades of rising inequ...

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The Tyranny of Merit

A world-famous political philosopher, and the bestselling author of Justice, reveals the driving force behind the resurgence of populism: the tyranny of the meritocracy and the resentments it produces.

Our politics are fraught with rancor and resentment. Decades of rising inequality and stalled mobility have fueled a populist revolt against elites. But while the pundits focus on wages and jobs, they are missing a big part of the story: social esteem, and the broader moral dimensions of our current crisis.

In recent decades, mainstream politicians across the aisle--from Reagan to Obama--have offered a rhetoric of rising: everyone should be given an equal chance to get ahead. But the relentless focus on "equal opportunity" ignores the morally corrosive attitudes that even a fair meritocracy generates. Among the winners, it generates hubris; among the losers, humiliation. Meritocratic hubris reflects the tendency of winners to inhale too deeply of their success, to forget the luck and good fortune that helped them on their way. It diminishes our capacity to see ourselves as sharing a common fate and leaves little room for the solidarity that can arise when we reflect on the contingency of our talents and fortunes. More than a protest against immigrants, outsourcing, and stagnant wages, the populist complaint is about the tyranny of merit. And the complaint is justified.

In The Tyranny of Merit, a searing critique of contemporary public discourse, Michael J. Sandel, "the world's most relevant living philosopher" (Newsweek), diagnoses our political moment by seeking out its moral underpinnings. He highlights the hubris a meritocracy fosters among the winners and the indignities it inflicts on those left behind. And he offers an alternative way of thinking about success--more attentive to the role of luck in human affairs, more conducive to an ethic of humility, and more hospitable to a politics of the common good.

Editorial: Farrar, Straus and Giroux

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Michael J. Sandel
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Michael J. Sandel (Minneapolis, 1953) ocupa la cátedra Anne t. y Robert M. Bass de Ciencias Políticas en la Universidad de Harvard y es uno de los autores de referencia en el ámbito de la filosofía pública. El curso sobre justicia que im...

Michael J. Sandel (Minneapolis, 1953) ocupa la cátedra Anne t. y Robert M. Bass de Ciencias Políticas en la Universidad de Harvard y es uno de los autores de referencia en el ámbito de la filosofía pública. El curso sobre justicia que imparte allí desde hace dos décadas es el más popular de la universidad. Premio Princesa de Asturias en Ciencias Sociales 2018, es autor de numerosas obras. En Debate ha publicado Justicia. ¿Hacemos lo que debemos? (2011), Lo que el dinero no puede comprar. Los límites morales del mercado (2012), Filosofía pública. Ensayos sobre moral en política (2020), La tiranía del mérito. ¿Qué ha sido del bien común? (2020), Contra la perfección. La ética en la era de la ingeniería genética (2022) y El descontento democrático (2023).

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