Michael J. Sandel teaches political philosophy at Harvard University. His books What Money Can't Buy: The Moral Limits of Markets and Justice: What's the Right Thing to Do? were international best sellers and have been translated into 27 languages. Sandel's legendary course "Justice" was the first Harvard course to be made freely available online and has been viewed by tens of millions. His BBC series "The Public Philosopher" explores the philosophical ideas lying behind the headlines with participants from around the world.
"Ahead of its time . . . a blistering critique . . . [Sandel's]
book underscores the way elite condescension prompts resentment of
higher education and antagonizes many who lack a B.A.--a majority
of the electorate. He cites evidence that elites aren't less
prejudiced than other people; it's just that they are prejudiced
against different people--those with less education."
--Nicholas Kristof, The New York Times "Many of us need what
[Sandel] does so well: help us grapple with the unexpected and
uncomfortable questions that history delivers us . . . Now's a good
time for both sides to sit down for a very serious talk, with The
Tyranny of Merit required reading for all."
--Arlie Hochschild, New York Times Book Review "Astute, insightful,
and empathetic, Sandel exposes the cruelty at the heart of some of
our most beloved myths about success. A must-read for anyone
struggling to understand populist resentment, and why, for many
Americans, the American Dream has come to feel more like a taunt
than a promise. A crucial book for this moment."
--Tara Westover, author of Educated "Sandel is the most important
and influential living philosopher . . . [His] new book offers a
profound critique of individualism, making the case for the move
away from self to community, from 'my wants now' to 'the common
good'."
--Paul Collier, Times Literary Supplement "Michael Sandel has spent
decades scrutinizing the tenets of Western liberalism, including
beliefs about justice, markets, and, now, meritocracy. In The
Tyranny of Merit, Sandel examines how the notion of meritocracy . .
. was torqued into an American shibboleth. Over time, Sandel
argues, it fed a 'toxic brew of hubris and resentment.'"
--Evan Osnos, The New Yorker "Now that Joe Biden has won his
restoration candidacy, where do we go from here? Should we rebuild
the system the way we left it? Sandel's book should be required
reading for anyone interested in rebuilding our broken nation."
--Chang Che, Los Angeles Review of Books "Brilliant . . . Sandel's
critique is as compelling as his plea for the renewal of social
bonds is powerful. Besides debunking a series of myths-- that
success is self-made, that humans are self-sufficient, that
educational attainment matters more than the dignity of work--the
book is a brave attack on technocracy as the foundation of a just
social order."
--Adrian Pabst, Prospect "Sandel shows us not only how the liberal
promise of equality of opportunity has not been fulfilled, but how
the very conception of life as a relentless competitive race
unjustly denigrates the losers, produces a cynical and arrogant
elite, corrupts institutions of higher education, and replaces
democracy with technocracy. Unwittingly, it thereby creates
populist backlash."
--Elizabeth Anderson, The Nation "The Tyranny of Merit is original,
lively and no mere critique: unlike many others who have written on
the "sorting" of society into winners and losers, Sandel produces a
persuasive argument about the kind of community we should seek . .
. The Tyranny of Merit is an important work, and makes a profound
point that our leaders would do well to understand."
--Nick Timothy, Daily Telegraph
"Sandel argues with compelling insight that for many Americans, the
fundamental discontent is not just the lack of economic opportunity
for so many whom globalization left behind, it's the dignity of
work, and particularly the work they do."
--Ron Carucci, Forbes "Michael Sandel's powerful new book The
Tyranny of Merit . . . is a searing account of the way that our
system of meritocracy has perverted our democracy . . . The problem
is clear: meritocracy, as it is symbolized by a college degree, is
eroding the feelings of solidarity and commonality that are at the
heart of a functioning democracy."
--Eboo Patel, Inside Higher Ed
"A very important book for this moment . . . It will give students
a new kind of courage to rethink their education."
--Anna Deavere Smith, actress and playwright
"The Tyranny of Merit is Sandel's response to Brexit and the
election of Donald Trump . . . Sandel draws on a vocabulary that
challenges liberal notions of autonomy in a way that has been
unfashionable for decades. Words such as "dependency",
"indebtedness", "mystery", "humility" and "luck" recur in his
book."
--Julian Coman, The Guardian
"A brilliant new book, The Tyranny of Merit . . . gets at this
all-important question of humiliation, and its relationship to
populism and democracy."
--Anand Giridharadas, The.Ink
"Michael Sandel views politics as fundamentally a moral enterprise,
and to "morally invigorate our public discourse" has been a
principal goal of his writings from the beginning of his career in
the early 1980s... His new book, The Tyranny of Merit . . . traces
the history of the idea and its abuses, from theological debates to
recent political campaigns. If we want to build a functional
democracy, he argues, we need to dismantle the notion of
meritocracy, and orient our politics around a renewed sense of the
common good."
--Win McCormack, The New Republic
"In a market society where money and merit are conflated, even a
fair meritocracy would implicitly affirm that the rich are rich
because they deserve to be, and the poor have no one to blame but
themselves for their plight. As Michael Sandel [argues] in The
Tyranny of Merit, one can hardly overstate the corrosive effect of
this belief on democracy. By dividing the population into winners
and losers, smart people and stupid ones, the meritocratic myth
promotes hubris on one side, humiliation and resentment on the
other."
--Jackson Lears, The New York Review of Books
"A terrific read . . . rich in moral exhortation, the kind that
would do your soul good."
--Polly Toynbee, columnist, The Guardian
"Any political leader who is really serious about 'building back
better' should read Michael J Sandel's The Tyranny of Merit because
it contains a blueprint for a brighter future..."
--Sean Smith, The Independent (London) "Sandel is among the few
thinkers who warn fellow elites that the very system that has
afforded them prestige, material comfort, and the tools to survive,
and even thrive, amid economic and social instability has given
rise to pervasive political discontent and lies at the root of the
recent populist backlash against elites."
--Patrick J. Deneen, American Affairs "In a much talked-about new
book, The Tyranny of Merit . . . Sandel argues that the polarized
politics of our time, and the resentments that fuel it, arise,
paradoxically, from a seemingly attractive ideal -- the
meritocratic promise that if you work hard and go to college, you
will rise."
--Thomas L. Friedman, The New York Times
"Sandel has become adept at articulating what we know, deep down,
to be true yet struggle as a society to act upon . . . [A]ny
political reformer would be well served by keeping a copy of The
Tyranny of Merit close at hand."
--Joe Humphreys, Irish Times
"This book shook some of my most fundamental assumptions... I
cannot recommend it highly enough."
--Shashi Tharoor, author and Member of Parliament (India), Jaipur
Literature Festival "Sandel is right to probe the dark things that
can come from embracing meritocracy . . . The ability to obtain
post-secondary degrees, particularly from elite institutions, is at
least as much a reflection of one's class and race as it is of
one's deservedness... Sandel wants [us] to be more forthright about
acknowledging the role of luck. Americans should show more humility
and, with it, strive for greater equality of condition as well as
equality of opportunity."
--Richard D. Kahlenberg, Washington Monthly
"Sandel has accomplished a remarkable feat . . . The book is an
important and timely contribution to the national debate,
considerably deepening existing critiques of meritocracy."
--Kate Andrias, American Journal of Law and Equality "A compelling
critique of meritocracy... Sandel's flowing prose shows why he is
feted for the accessibility and popularity both of his books and
lectures."
--Michael Marmot, Lancet
"As we know, the rich enjoy advantages that invariably tilt the
playing field in their favor . . . However, Sandel argues there's a
more basic moral problem: The meritocratic way of thinking
generates hubris among the 'winners', by encouraging them to think
that their success is all their own doing and reflects their
superior virtue . . . Seduced by the ethic of aspiration, many of
us have been complacent in accepting meritocracy, without
considering that it also serves as a moral justification for the
status quo."
--Tim Soutphommasane, Sydney Morning Herald "Sandel argues that the
common good is not just the sum of individual preferences. It is
about a sense of solidarity based on a shared understanding of what
makes for a good society.... How do we move to a society in which
all, whatever work they do or do not do, are recognized as having
dignity and value rather than left with the sense of being a
loser?"
--Richard Harries, Church Times
"[An] engaging and timely critique . . . that will help us to heal
our divided societies."
--Matthew Goodwin, The Times (London)
"A rich, incisive analysis of how the meritocratic ideal
contributes to contemporary political crisis."
--Publisher's Weekly
"The Tyranny of Merit is infused with moral urgency, elegantly
written and cogently argued, with a core conclusion both succinct
and indisputable: meritocracy does not counter inequality, it
justifies it."
--Brian Bethune, MacLean's
"Sandel offers a cogent, penetrating critique of meritocracy,
which, he argues persuasively, has trammeled our sense of community
and mutual respect...A stimulating examination of a divisive social
and political problem."
--Kirkus
"Well-argued, clear, and nicely timed . . . Sandel unfolds a
programme for dignified lives for all."
--Simon Kuper, New Statesman
"Over the past 40 years, [Sandel] observes, America's ruling class
has exalted one quality, one virtue, one human attribute above all
others: smartness... But, as Sandel points out, the elevation of
smart over dumb leaves behind many other valid measures of value:
right vs. wrong, fair vs. unfair, free vs. unfree, equal vs.
unequal.... In an increasingly precarious economy, it has come to
seem that only those possessed of a particular kind of intelligence
have a chance at a stable, secure life, or at the satisfying sense
that one's work is honored and valued by society at large."
--Annie Murphy Paul, The Boston Globe
"Sandel gives us a masterful account of flaws in the meritocratic
ideal and suggestions of what should replace it."
--Deborah L. Rhode, American Journal of Law and Equality "This is a
remarkable book about justice. In his unique and powerful moral
voice, Michael Sandel digs at the roots of our divisions, dissects
the causes of inequality, and dismantles the lazy orthodoxy of
those on the left and the right. Accessible and profound, The
Tyranny of Merit is a revelatory assessment of pervasive unfairness
in our society, driven in part by a naïve and myopic reliance on
the notion of merit. In a time of easy rhetoric and thoughtless
tribalism, this provocative book is a must-read for anyone who
still cares about the common good. You will catch yourself
wondering, again and again, "Why have I never thought of it that
way?" No good faith reader will come away from this book
unchanged."
--Preet Bharara, former U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of
New York and Author of Doing Justice: A Prosecutor's Thoughts on
Crime, Punishment, and the Rule of Law
"The Tyranny of Merit deftly exposes the flaws and fallacies of
meritocratic philosophy. In lucid, illuminating prose, Sandel makes
a compelling case for uprooting inequality and building a fairer
society shaped by true principles of justice. A seminal work."
--Darren Walker, President, Ford Foundation
"The Tyranny of Merit is truly a great book. It is the rare book of
political theory that will be widely accessible, make news, and
provoke healthy debate--debate that will strengthen our democracy
regardless of the side one takes. And it will resonate widely, even
profoundly, about the situation we are all in."
--Elliot Gerson, Vice President of the Aspen Institute
"A lot of us have nibbled around the edges of this subject. But
we've all been waiting for somebody to write THE book on the
subject of what's wrong with meritocracy . . . This is indeed THE
book, and it is wonderful."
--John Ralston Saul, author, former President of PEN International
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