- The expert possess all the following as they pertain to some well-defined field of study or practice:
- Knowledge - the comprehensive body of accumulated fact, technique, and behavior that applies to the field.
- Judgment - the ability to apply the knowledge widely and appropriately to problems in the field with satisfactory results.
- Skill - the ability to execute proficiently the methods and techniques of the field.
- The expert's proficiency is demonstrated by some objective and externalized means of adjudiction. Such means include, but are not limited to:
- An academic degree or certificate granted by an accredited entity.
- Long-term successful professional employment in the field.
- Creation of an significant original contribution to the field.
- The expert's proficiency is widely recognized by other practitioners in the field, and in the world at large.
Those are all subjective and ambiguous attributes. Compare Jack White's experience and non-degrees with this other guy from the Panel and I just don't see much difference.
"David B. Eisendrath, a photographer, writer and lecturer known for his understanding of photographic principles and techniques, died of a heart attack Monday. He was 73 years old and lived in Brooklyn.
Mr. Eisendrath was born in Chicago in 1914. He began photographing while a student at the University of Chicago and after graduating in 1937 worked as a staff photographer for The Chicago Times. In 1940 he moved to New York to join the picture staff of the newspaper P.M. During World War II he worked in the Office of War Information as a photojournalist for America magazine.
After the war he became a freelance photographer, specializing in industrial subjects. At the same time, he began to write and lecture about his craft. His columns, which appeared in the magazines Popular Photography, Industrial Photography and Photo Methods for Industry, were admired for conveying often abstruse subject matter understandably. At the time of his death he was a contributing editor of Modern Photography.
Mr. Eisendrath was a member of the American Society of Magazine Photographers and the Society of Photographic Scientists and Engineers, and he was a fellow of the Photographic Society of America."
* * *
Mr. BLAKEY. "Mr. Chairman, the committee has also asked Mr.
Jack D. White to appear as a witness today. Mr. White has studied
the backyard photographs for over 10 years.
Mr. White received a B.A. in journalism major, history minor
from the Texas Christian University in 1949. Currently, he is vice
president of Witherspoon and Associates, Ft. Worth's largest advertising and public relations firm.
Mr. White has served with Witherspoon in various capacities for
over 25 years. He has done extensive work in all areas of reproduction, including photographic, mechanical, printing, and the graphic
arts."
** *
Thus, seems to me "expertise" is in the eye of the beholder.