(In reality, everyone is motivated by the pursuit of knowledge, and maybe a little by the pursuit of fame, including underpaid grad students, and tenured professors, and even the actual retirees (emeritus professors) who often keep working.)
This site does not whine when someone like Maciej Ceglowski creates a "lifestyle business" that only takes 10 hours or so a week, but it whines when people unionize or climb the academic ladder to get good working condition.
None of them earns as much as a billionaire's child earns just by having parents who gave them a trust fund.
Granted, I worked in STEM fields. Maybe this author does not realize what it is like in the physical sciences or engineering?
But, I think most people do. The system is deliberately designed to push an assistant professor so hard, that when they get a permanent contract, they're conditioned to keep pushing. It typically succeeds.
Most professors I've known more closely seem to be workaholics with bad work-life balance and this is actually the main reason I don't want to go into academia.
Hypotheses: 1) the distribution is long-tailed and my samples are only from "good" universities, or 2) the tenure-track process selects for hard workers anyway
Maybe it's just that
Like everyone else, I have always had the pleasure of being at a top-20 school (in some list or the other!). Fortunately, I think this article is only attacking tenure at schools rated lower. (Let me know if I misinterpreted the article.)
We could eliminate tenure at lower-ranked schools. I'm not sure who will teach there if we do. The 90th percentile salary for a new tenure-track professor is 145K (https://cra.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/2023-CRA-Taulbee-... page 49). Nobody competent is going to take that salary without the possibility of tenure.