Thomas Sowell wrote a book about how intellectuals get it wrong [he uses the Chamberlain Appeaser crowd as an example], and yet they are propped up by their peers.
The Divine Right of Intellectuals (Review of Thomas Sowell’s “Intellectuals and Society”)
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2422301/posts
” As a result, intellectuals are free from one of the most rigorous constraints facing other occupations: external standards. An engineer will ultimately be judged on whether the structures he designs hold up, a businessman on whether he makes money, and so on. By contrast, the ultimate test of an intellectuals ideas is whether other intellectuals find those ideas interesting, original, persuasive, elegant, or ingenious. There is no external test. If the intellectuals are like-minded, as they often are, then the validity of an idea depends on what those intellectuals already believe. This means that an intellectuals ideas are tested only by internal criteria and become sealed off from feedback from the external world of reality.
An intellectuals reputation, then, depends not on whether his ideas are verifiable but on the plaudits of his fellow intellectuals. “
Brilliant........no, not the intellectuals....Sowell ;-)
From my home page....
” Here are my modest observations on life 1)intellectuals aren’t 2)consultants can’t 3) Think tanks don’t 4) Conservatives won’t. “