technocracy
n.
1919, coined by W.H. Smyth as a name for a new system of government by technical experts, from techno- + -cracy.
William Henry Smyth, a distinguished engineer of Berkeley, California, wrote at the close of the war a series of thoughtful papers for the New York magazine "Industrial Management", on the subject of "Technocracy". His thesis was the need of a Supreme National Council of Scientists to advise us how best to live, and how most efficiently to realize our individual aspirations and our national purpose. ["The Bookman," March 1922]
〔李〕n.专家政治的;技术统治 [-cracy=rule] ←techno-[GK] =art and skill技术
〔李〕n. 专家政治 [techno- =artandskill] ←-cracy [GK] =power or rule表示“权力;统治”