"The poorer a man's intellectual equipment, the more does he revel in technicalities. A man with a wealth of valuable ideas is anxious to communicate those ideas, and will naturally tend to choose for that purpose the simplest language he can find. But a man whose intellectuality is a sham, and who has in truth nothing to communicate, endeavors to conceal his emptiness by an outward show of learning. . . . He fails to see that the love of long words and technical terms is in fact nothing but a symptom of his mental infirmity. It is a kind of intellectual disease." W.T. Stace, "The Snobbishness of the Learned," in Atlantic Essays 94, 99-100 (Samuel N. Bogorad & Cary B. Graham eds., 1958).
Tuesday, June 2, 2009
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