“The death of expertise” is one of those phrases that grandly announces its own self- importance. It’s a title that risks alienating a lot of people before they even open the book, almost daring the reader to find a mistake in it somewhere just to take the author down a peg. I understand that reaction, because I feel much the same way about such sweeping pronouncements. Our cultural and literary life is full of premature burials of everything: shame, common sense, manliness, femininity, childhood, good taste, literacy, the Oxford comma, and so on. The last thing we all need is one more encomium for something we know isn’t quite dead.
CITATION STYLE
Yoo, H. (2018). The Death of Expertise: The Campaign Against Established Knowledge and Why It Matters. Journal of the Korean Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 29(4), 185–186. https://doi.org/10.5765/jkacap.180021
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