Gordon J Torture said:Hmmm...so now you are elevating people above society based on intelligence and social position. It doesn't really make it an equal society then. Its a very idealistic society, but a little bit unfair.
Nope, no one is "elevated" above society based on intelligence. Infact, the position of a person who must lead the people through a revolution and resist any temptation to acquire individual control, would be a positition of necessary burden rather than an "elevation".
But this isn't entirely what you said...you left out the part about the individual having to come from humble backrounds.That immediately would place restrictions on people based on economic circumstance. That happens now.
How do you determine the fairness in work? If we all have our doctorate in philosophy or medicine,et al. Who's going to do the real physical labour? Who's going to work the waste treatment plants?
Are you implying that those who work in the waste treatment plants currently do so because they are forced to due to circumstance? Are you implying such people are not worthy of an education because that would deter them from their labor that noone else would be willing to do and this system is imperative?
I implied nothing at all. People that work in waste treatment facilities do so because they believe they are compensated fairly for the work. I am saying that it is a position in which you are not going to get a lot of people jumping to fill this position. This means you have to require individuals to perform public service positions before proceeding on to what they were trained to do.
This becomes especially true if you spent 7 years studying to become an architect or a doctor,et al.Why would you want to work in a field outside your training?
Educating all the people would not result in lack of people doing any labor jobs. It would only result in one's family he was born into, being far less likely of dictating the probability of either labor or otherwise, for his future, in every way other than possibly a common area of interest. It would also result in the people being far less likely to be manipulated.
You are making a couple of assumptions.
First that I think educating the population is a bad thing. Nothing could be further from the truth.
You are also assuming that everyone wants to pursue higher forms of education.That is not always true either.
Quite often genius level IQ students opt out of the system for a meriad of reasons. This would mean your society would be willing to forego all that the brightest have to offer becasue they were not willing to attend school and pretend to learn something they already know.
For your system to function. Mandatory public service would have to be required at some point in every persons life. It would have to be done to ensure that the positions that are less desirable, but necessary would be performed on a regular basis. It is the only way that would allow people to pursue their true ambitions.
You really haven't addressed the issue of fairness either. How would it be fair to someone who has spent seven years in Med School ...to pull them out to work on say a road building crew until a position opens up in Medicine. It is a very real possibility. You could get a high percentage of people chosing on specific field.