What jumps out for me is how few of these guys are in the hard sciences or applied fields. Havel, of course, is a huge exception -- you can't get more applied than being President of a newly freed country! Chomsky's field has some applications, but not that would affect the common person. Krugman is an applied economist, but actually applying his ideas would result in racism and poverty, so we can throw that out. Outside that, it's mostly not just intellectuals, but intellectuals for intellectuals musing about things which are unfalsifiable in science and tangential (at most) to the everyday lives of people. Stephen Hawking was among the top write-ins, but not on the list. Where's Gordon Moore? Now there's an intellectual whose ideas changed people's lives. Where's Santiago Calatrava? There was only one architect on the list of 100. Only two attorneys (both good choices). They got better in biology, with five applied biologists in addition to historical biologists like Diamond and Dawkins and in physicists with four. But none of those guys made the "people's choice" top 20.
I think the Foreign Policy editors did a better job than their readers and that even they missed the mark a lot. How do you list nine economists in 100 intellectuals? And if you do, how do you include Larry Summers but miss Milton Friedman?
I think the Foreign Policy editors did a better job than their readers and that even they missed the mark a lot. How do you list nine economists in 100 intellectuals? And if you do, how do you include Larry Summers but miss Milton Friedman?