pseudointellectual

English

Etymology

pseudo- (false, fake) + intellectual

Noun

pseudointellectual (plural pseudointellectuals)

  1. A person who claims proficiency in scholarly or artistic activities while lacking in-depth knowledge or critical understanding.
  2. A person who pretends to be of greater intelligence than he or she in fact is.
    • 2002 September 3, Cyber Cypher, “The sign of pseudo-intellectual”, in alt.usage.english, Usenet, message-ID <Xns927E5A0D9A8C1ccdenews@130.133.1.4>:
      The telltale sign of a pseudo intellectual is the superficial sprinkling and misuse of terms like "paradigm shift" and name dropping

Usage notes

Usage is fraught, and pseudointellectual may be used as a general term of abuse for intellectuals one dislikes or disagrees with. Nevertheless, in more careful use a rather clear distinction is drawn:[1] a pseudointellectual is someone dishonestly or insincerely using the language, style, or topics of an intellectual, but who lacks the goals, morals, or ability of a “genuine” intellectual. It is someone who acts pretentiously and wishes to win an argument or impress, rather than modestly trying to find the truth – a focus on surface and rhetoric over content. These often involve a superficial understanding of a subject and condescension to the audience, as well as possible self-delusion (not being consciously dishonest, but rather sincerely thinking oneself to be behaving as a genuine intellectual despite one's incompetence).

Synonyms

See also

Adjective

pseudointellectual (comparative more pseudointellectual, superlative most pseudointellectual)

  1. Pretentiously or insincerely intellectual. Nonsense.

References

  1. See the Sydney Harris reference for detailed criteria.
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