Morley wrote:According to your formulation, higher education should educate in various skills involved in producing information, but the skill of consuming information should be classified as a luxury good and left to whim of the marketplace.
Under these conditions, a given set of people will learn (in the university, at taxpayer expense) to produce science, art, religion, propaganda, or the mutually agreed-upon fictions of money and justice--but consumers will lack the basic information (and critical thinking skills) to understand and wisely consume these goods, because consumption skills are a luxury good and should be left to the free market to provide.
Hmm. I didn't think of it that way, but you have a point.
The distinction between consumption and production is not a deeply-held dogma of mine. It's an idea that strike me a couple of years ago after reading that one blog comment, and I haven't had much chance to examine it. I'm not sure whether foxes or hedgehogs are better (I'm still enough of a fox to have that excerpt of Berlin's Tolstoy essay saved on my laptop) but age tends to make hedgehogs of us. Few of my colleagues have time for debates like this, and no doubt this is part of why things are as they are.
So okay, there's actually a lot to be said for educating consumers. Is the distinction between consumption and production really capricious? It might not hit the mark. From the viewpoint of an advertising executive, after all, the consumer is the ultimate creator. The consumer produces the market, and the producer merely consumes that demand. The agent suffers and the patient acts.
It still seems to me, though, that there is some kind of distinction to be made and that making it is important. There may be a tragedy of the commons problem, where it's bad for everyone if no-one has skills in consumption, but one's own lack of production skills is what most hurts individuals.