[lbo-talk] Occupy's 89%? Where anarchism shuns unionists, it allies with the ultra-right

Eubulides paraconsistent at comcast.net
Sun Mar 11 11:27:34 PDT 2012


On 03/11/2012 11:12 AM, Marv Gandall wrote:


> Or, as Kissinger slyly observed, "academic political debates are so heated because the stakes are so low".

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http://forum.woodenboat.com/archive/index.php/t-138378.html

This is via Google, of course, but it's an extensive quotation from a book which sets itself up as the go-to source for such things: the quote verifier (http://www.amazon.com/Quote-Verifier-Said-What-Where/dp/product-description/0312340044).

“ACADEMIC politics are so vicious precisely because the stakes are so small.” This observation is routinely attributed to former Harvard professor Henry Kissinger. Well before Kissinger got credit for that thought in the mid-1970s, however, Harvard political scientist Richard Neustadt told a reporter, “Academic politics is much more vicious than real politics. We think it’s because the stakes are so small.” Others believe this quip originated with political scientist Wallace Sayre, Neustadt’s onetime colleague at Columbia University. A 1973 book gave as “Sayre’s Law,” “In any dispute the intensity of feeling is inversely proportional to the value of the stakes at issue—that is why academic politics are so bitter.” Sayre’s colleague and coauthor Herbert Kaufman said his usual wording was “The politics of the university are so intense because the stakes are so low.” In his 1979 book Peter’s People, Laurence Peter wrote, “Competition in academia is so vicious because the stakes are so small.” He called this “Peter’s Theory of Entrepreneurial Aggressiveness in Higher Education.” Variations on that thought have also been attributed to scientist-author C. P. Snow, professor-politician Daniel Patrick Moynihan, and politician Jesse Unruh (among others). According to the onetime editor of Woodrow Wilson’s papers, however, long before any of them strode the academic-political scene, Wilson observed often that the intensity of academic squabbles he witnessed while president of Princeton University was a function of the “triviality” of the issues being considered.

Verdict: An old academic saw that may have originated with Woodrow Wilson but was put in modern play by Wallace Sayre.

I'll leave it to others to surmise whether Kissinger was a narcissist :-)

Ian



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