PERSON
Clark Kerr
The institutional architect who named the multiversity, designed the California Master Plan, and left the most precise diagnosis of what the university will need to become when AI renders its primary offerings obsolete.
Clark Kerr did not build the American research university so much as describe what it had already become—and the description was so clear-eyed that it became constitutive. His term for the modern institution, the
multiversity, named a creature that served undergraduates, graduate students, government agencies, industry partners, hospitals, alumni, and the general public simultaneously, held together, as he put it with characteristic dryness, by “a common grievance over parking.” The
California Master Plan for Higher Education, which he authored in 1960, operationalized this pluralism into a three-tier system that educated more human beings at greater scale and with greater social mobility than any educational structure in history. Kerr was the university's most honest president, which made him its most unsettling one: he called the faculty's migration toward research and away from teaching a rational response to irrational incentives, called the president's job “mediator” rather than “leader,” and called the credential more signal than substance—a generation before economists formalized the point. When