A word that is thrown around freely by anyone who thinks,
suspects or wishes that someone else should be taken seriously. Most people
seem to use it of those who appear on TV and give their opinions without
swearing or stabbing their finger in anyone’s eye. A more robust characteristic
is that they are people who can introduce into debate ideas that have not been
prominent in the popular press in the previous 48 hours. When used carefully,
the term is applied to people employed in non-technical areas of academia, and
to those who work in the arts in almost any capacity.
Those who analyse these things more closely tend to describe
an intellectual as someone who deals with ideas as such, rather than with the
practical consequences of ideas. Mathematicians, engineers and so on, whose
intellectual formation and the concepts they use in their work involve a higher
level of understanding and rigour than most TV pundits have, are not generally
considered intellectuals. Philosophers (itself a very broad concept), high-brow
critics, and the more analytic members of the arts fraternity, on the other
hand, do not get their hands dirty, are not concerned with the reality derived
from the ideas whose existence they affirm, turning them over in their fingers
and pronouncing authoritatively, dogmatically even, on what they should
mean.
Fair enough, I’m not going to claim that the word must only
be used to mean what I think it should mean. The problem comes from the fact
that the greatest intellects in the world today, those whose enquiries, in many
different fields, have made, or could make, the greatest difference to human
understanding, including of itself and its society, are unknown to the general
public (in which I include the popular press) and their contributions to
thought and knowledge are neither known nor understood.
It may be said, quite fairly, that it requires no
explanation to understand that an engine works or a bridge stays up, while to
appreciate the purpose of an abstract idea requires more than observation. On
the other hand, mathematicians don’t seem to count as intellectuals, although
there are few disciplines more abstract than mathematics. (In the interests of
full disclosure, I used to be a mathematician).
At the most basic level of selling advertising, the press
requires ‘intellectuals’ to give some impression of seriousness to their own
opinions, but they need something that is easy to understand and that will
resonate with the readership, or they will lose them. Thus, real intellectuals
are not a lot of use. Or rather, those who are not able to speak so that normal
people can understand and be interested by them are not a lot of use.
Why then do we expect the kind of people who are thought of
as intellectuals to explain practical things about politics? Or do we want them
only to tell us how to feel good about ourselves because we believe the right
things and others don’t, and then everything will come right by magic?
Of course, what I’m looking for is a definition of
intellectual which will clearly include me, but, even when I make the rules,
I’m having trouble doing it.
3 comments:
As a thicko, I can't help you out there as to what an intellectual is.
One who, for fame or respect, thinks in general terms rather than to solve a practical, quotidian problem.
@JH
My problem exactly.
@Sackerson
That sounds like a good summary. But I'm not sure I want to be one of those. Which solves my other problem, too. Result!
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