What Annie Dillard says about judging works applies to judging university education and research, for which administrators always try to maintain the public impression of excellence:
Sophisticated, hurried readers continue to judge works on the sophistication of their surfaces. . . . I mean only to utter darkly that in the present confusion of technical sophistication and significance, an emperor or two might slip by with no clothes.
(Quoted from page 74 of The Cult of Statistical Significance: How the Standard Error Costs Us Jobs, Justice, and Lives, by Stephen T. Ziliak and Deirdre N. McCloskey. The University of Michigan Press, 2008.)
For a brief biography of Annie Dillard, click here. For images of or relating to Annie Dillard, click here.
For a work biography of Stephen T. Ziliak, click here. For a work biography of Deirdre N. McCloskey, click here.
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