cthia wrote:Duckk wrote:Pretty much. Yes, HotQ mentioned he had a good reputation as an economist, but only as an academic. He never had to enact actual policy until the the disastrous High Ridge government. Everyone outside the Liberals hated him - even Edward Janacek, who was hardly a bastion of moral and intellectual prowess.
I was under the impression that Houseman received his "political merit" through horse trading.
NOT his "academic and professional merit" -- which he earned. It is because he earned it, academically, which gave the horse traders some ammo.
Even a horse trader can't trade a horse with bad knees, bad eyesight and basically nothing to work with.
Jonathan_S wrote:The full relivant quote from HotQ isI, at least, am left with the impression that he went from graduation (possibly also from Mannheim University) directly into academia - and then branched out into working with the Foreign Office's diplomatic service (before so publicly wrecking himself over his myopic facile analysis of the Grayson Masada economic and military situation -- among other things he failed to noticed the public record, part of the briefing materials the delegation was given before leaving Manticore, that Masada appropriated 30% of its system domestic product to its military).Honor of the Queen wrote:Houseman had a reputation as a brilliant economist and, given Grayson’s backward economy, sending him made sense, but he was also an ivory-tower intellectual who’d been plucked from a tenured position in Mannheim University’s College of Economics for government service. Mannheim wasn’t called “Socialist U” for nothing, and Houseman’s prominent family was a vocal supporter of the Liberal Party.
But boy, while doing a text search to see if I could find where he'd graduated from it seems nobody in the books has a good thing to say about him. I especially liked the bit from HAE about Hauptman's opinion of himHonor Among Enemies wrote:In his own way, Reginald Houseman shared that prejudice against the nouveau riche—and by Houseman standards, even the Hauptman fortune was very nouveau indeed—but he was widely acknowledged as one of the half-dozen top economists of the Star Kingdom.
He was not, however, so recognized by Klaus Hauptman, who regarded him with virtually unmitigated contempt. Despite Houseman's innumerable academic credentials, Hauptman considered him a dilettante who personified the ancient cliché that "Those who can, do; those who can't, teach," and Houseman's sublime self-importance was immensely irritating to a man who'd proven his own competence in the one way no one could question: by succeeding
I wouldn't count on that Jonathan. Read between the lines more attentively. I suppose I understand the collegiate world much more than the average person. Now, it is possible that after Houseman received tenure, he coasted. Which is one of the problems of tenure track professors.
Houseman was plucked from a tenured position. I dated a professor who was seeking a tenured position and got it. Tenured positions are hard to come by. The applicant must be published, have funded research grants, involved in current research, etc., etc., etc. And a plethora of more etcetera. ONE DOES NOT RECEIVE TENURE UNLESS TEACHING FOR YEARS! And the university normally requires teaching experience at at least one other university.
Many professors who have tenure track are involved in outside business. For instance, my Theoretical Physics professor also worked for NASA. Of course, he was tenured. How many movies have you seen where the government, just as in this case, seeks the help of the most knowledgeable person in the field? It is a reality!
Remember the smartest guy on the planet? LOL
My bet would be that Houseman made a mark for himself long before teaching. And that his teaching was as a result of his being scouted and courted -- probably as a result of his many publishings and extracurricular outside work. These elite universities don't offer tenure track, then tenure, to the average professor. Why should they, when they would have to buy out his/her contract if the marriage goes south.
I'm more inclined to believe that Hauptman was speaking from personal prejudices. He also had a very low opinion of one Honor Harrington.