His argument appears quite solid at first glance, but it has to be decoupled from reactionary politics first. I actually agree with the "core" of even the controversial bits about the need for ethical instruction, etc, but NOT in the way he appears to mean it! Damn, if I had the patience and the time, I'd have put a liberal spin on those same ideas to see how it would look
Except for the bit where he gives an oh-so-fake nod to the happiness and personal development of the "mediocre" students, while stressing that they don't really matter as individuals. That's so misanthropic in connotation! (I'm judging by summaries/reviews of the book and bits of the video, not the complete work.)
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Post by fellow LW reader Razib Khan, who many here probably know from the gnxp site or perhaps from his debate with Eliezer.