CONCEPT
The Meritocratic Trap
Alain de Botton's diagnosis of the specific suffering that the meritocratic revolution produces: the condition in which failure carries the weight of personal verdict because success was promised as the reward of merit, making every shortfall a reflection not of circumstance but of character.
The meritocratic revolution promised liberation from aristocratic privilege. It delivered liberation plus a new and peculiarly cruel form of suffering—the suffering of the person who cannot blame the system, because the system is fair. In a society that distributes status by birth, the peasant can blame his position on the accident of parentage. In a society that distributes status by merit, the person who has not risen can only blame herself.
De Botton's
Status Anxiety identifies this as the foundational emotional structure of modern professional life: the
anxiety produced by the gap between what one could achieve and what one has achieved, magnified by a cultural framework that makes that gap a verdict on one's character rather than a description of one's circumstances. Artificial intelligence has not broken this bargain; it has illuminated its terms with a forensic light that makes the incompleteness impossible to ignore. When a tool can