Uneducation with PhDs is a philosophical inquiry into modern education and its hidden psychological structure.
Rather than treating education as a system in need of reform, this book examines it as a conditioning process-one that gradually replaces intelligence with authority, curiosity with compliance, and understanding with memorisation. It asks a question rarely confronted directly: why has the expansion of education not produced a parallel expansion of clarity, wisdom, or ethical maturity?
Moving beyond policy critique, the work analyzes how teaching becomes a mechanism of obedience, how morality is shaped through conditioning rather than insight, and how higher degrees often narrow perception instead of deepening it. From classrooms to academia, from examinations to expertise, the book traces how intelligence is contained, redirected, and ultimately subordinated to institutional validation.
This is not a guide, a self-help manual, or a political manifesto. It offers no solutions, frameworks, or prescriptions. Its purpose is diagnostic-to expose patterns that are normalized and therefore rarely questioned. The chapters are written not to persuade, but to observe carefully how modern education structures thought, identity, and power.
Uneducation with PhDs is for readers interested in philosophy, critical inquiry, education theory, and the psychology of authority. It challenges the assumption that knowledge equals understanding and invites the reader to examine the difference between being educated and being intelligent.
This book does not ask for agreement. It asks for attention.
Related Subjects
Philosophy