Posted on 09/19/2016 12:45:55 PM PDT by Darnright
It also describes to a "T", the average Social Justice Warrior.
Absolutely agree.
The bible, and all true spiritual traditions, call it pride.
And pride goeth before the fall.
While I think he loses it at the end of this article, overall he is repeating what I have been saying for years. IYI is a great term for these people who seam to believe everything they read but rarely understand it. They can quote it. But they can’t understand it.
IYI is a real problem with America and the world.
“Some ideas are so absurd only an intellectual could believe them.”
- George Orwell
The author most amusingly illustrates the contempt one subcaste of the Better-than-yous has for a competing subcaste. A pox on your shibboleths! Maybe I’ve never gotten drunk with Russians or with a Somali immigrant cabdriver (neither is a safe activity for a woman), but I’m sure he’s never engaged in harmonic glossolalia with Salvadorans.
So there, I’m as “authentic” as you, Nassib-who-used-to-just-go-by-Nick. Yes, I’m that old.
Right on.
The idiot academic or intellectual is real, but this guy is just another variation on it.
psycholophasters and pathologizers, oh my.
*drink*
That said, he's got several good points. I especially like the one about the unreliability of "scientific" information in many fields, such that a person really is as likely to live a long, healthy life by just doing what his mom says as by paying attention to "experts."
Thanks for posting this great article. Ever since I was graduated from a non Ivy League college, I have been getting stabbed in the back and having to put up with the IYI, Intellectual Yet Idiot in the workplace and even the Navy.
I didn’t realize how prejudiced and dangerous these IYI people were/are until I turned 40.
Enough said here...
You make some great points. People have their own authenticity, whether it be tossing ideas back-and-forth with drunk Russians, or those from any number of other cultures.
It’s the condescension of the IYI that makes most conservatives nuts.
There’s a saying where I live.
“There’s book smart; and then there’s common sense.”
I agree. Most human beings haven't had much opportunity for international travel, for example. They recognize that a person who has traveled internationally has had experiences different from a person who stayed home. However, the problem arises when the person who has traveled claims moral authority on that basis.
For "international travel," one can substitute "self-proclaimed elite education" or a variety of other experiences. None of those experiences gives the person a moral authority above my mother.
>IYI is a real problem with America and the world.<
The naivety of such people is threatening to get a lot of innocent people killed or maimed. All one has to do is turn on the news.
As my dad would say, educated beyond their capacity to learn.
I’ve heard it said that Nassim Nicholas Taleb is one really smart feller.
So-called "progressives" of both Parties in recent times, portray themselves as the "intellectual" elite, although they may be totally bereft of any real knowledge or understanding of the great ideas which were the seedbed of Ameria's successful 200-year experiment in liberty.
Today's so-called "progressives," with all of their domination of academia and Far Left politics, seem to fit into a category described in an essay by T.S. Eliot on Virgil:
"In our time, when men seem more than ever to confuse wisdom with knowledge and knowledge with information and to try to solve the problems of life in terms of engineering, there is coming into existence a new kind of provincialism which perhaps deserves a new name. It is a provincialism not of space but of time--one for which history is merely a chronicle of human devices which have served their turn and have been scrapped, one for which the world is the property solely of the living, a property in which the dead hold no share."(Bold added for emphasis)
Without intellectual anchoring in the enduring ideas which provided the philosophical foundation of America's Declaration of Independence and Constitution, their vain imaginations of superiority only expose their limited world view.
Yet, the America which rose from obscurity to greatness, from crude hoes and axes to putting a man on the moon, and from oppression by King George to a symbol of liberty for millions all over the world--that America provides shelter for them, even as they attempt to "change" her into something unimagined by the Founders, and ungrounded in Constitutional principles.
If they are allowed to succeed in their own little provincial experiment, their posterity never will know the "blessings of Liberty" proclaimed by the Preamble to America's Constitution.
Now might be a good time for conservatives to read Dr. Russell Kirk's "The Conservative Mind, which can be read online, by the way.
In Kirk's last chapter he reviews the works of poets and writers, quoting lines which now seem to bear a striking resemblance to the players on stage in American politics today.
For instance, in Robert Frost's "A Case for Jefferson," Frost writes of the character Harrison:
"Harrison loves my country too
But wants it all made over new.
. . . .
He dotes on Saturday pork and beans.
But his mind is hardly out of his teens.
With him the love of country means
Blowing it all to smithereens
And having it made over new."
Yes, the pseudointellectuals who occupy the White House, the media, and much of Congress fancy themselves "intellectuals."
By their words and actions, however, they display that provinciality Dr. Kirk recalls as having been described by T. S. Eliot (see above) as being one of time and place, having no intellectual grounding in ideas older than their own little experience in dabbling and discussing Mao, Marx, and other theoreticians.
America's written Constitution deserves protectors whose minds are out of their "teens" in terms of their understanding of civilization's long struggle for individual liberty.
It certainly deserves protectors who do not consider it a "flawed" document because that Constitution does not permit the government it structures to run rough shod over the rights of its "only KEEPERS, the People" (Justice Story).
Blasting it "all to smithereens" seems to be the goal of the Far Left and its power-hungry leaders.
Those who have found ways to bypass the Constitution's limits on their power rely on what they believe to be the ignorance of the American people when they assert extra-Constitutional powers. They have been outwitted, however, by an increasingly knowledgeable citizenry who are using the miracles of technology to study for themselves ancient and modern writings on the ideas of liberty versus those of tyranny. As Jefferson wisely observed:
"History, by apprising the people of the past, will enable them to judge of the future; it will avail them of the experience of other times and other nations; it will qualify them as judges of the actions and designs of men; it will enable them to know ambition under every disguise it may assume; and knowing it, to defeat its views."
Brilliance is often narrowly specialized, but brilliant individuals are often treated as being practically omniscient in all matters. Einstein could scarcely even manage to dress himself.
Bump.....
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