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Webster 1913 Edition


Sciolist

Sci′o-list

,
Noun.
[L.
sciolus
. See
Sciolous
.]
One who knows many things superficially; a pretender to science; a smatterer.
These passages in that book were enough to humble the presumption of our modern
sciolists
, if their pride were not as great as their ignorance.
Sir W. Temple.
A master were lauded and
sciolists
shent.
R. Browning.

Webster 1828 Edition


Sciolist

SCI'OLIST

,
Noun.
[L. sciolus, a diminutive formed on scio, to know.]
One who knows little, or who knows many things superficially; a smatterer.
These passages in that book, were enough to humble the presumption of our modern sciolists, if their pride were not as great as their ignorance.

Definition 2024


sciolist

sciolist

English

Noun

sciolist (plural sciolists)

  1. One who exhibits only superficial knowledge; a self-proclaimed expert with little real understanding.
    • 1808, E[dmund] B[urke], A Treatise on the First Principles of Christianity, in which all Difficulties Stated by Ancient and Modern Sceptics, are Dispassionately Discussed, Halifax, Nova Scotia: Printed by John Howe and Son, OCLC 869235756, page 207:
      Men of true ſcience modestly admit the truth on the authority of the divine word; the ſciolist in imitation of the peasant, whoſe obſtinacy is the natural reſult of pride, and ignorance, will not believe if he does not comprehend.
    • 1893, Arthur Symons, “The Decadent Movement in Literature”, in Harper's New Monthly Magazine, volume 87, New York, N.Y.: Harper & Brothers, OCLC 1641392, page 863:
      But M. [Édouard] Dujardin is a poet; "vers libres" in the hands of a sciolist are the most intolerably easy and annoying of poetical exercises.
    • 1907, Religious Education Association, The Materials of Religious Education: Being the Principal Papers Present at, and the Proceedings of the Fourth General Convention of the Religious Education Association, Rochester, New York, February 5–7, 1907 [Proceedings of the Annual Convention; 4th], Chicago, Ill.: Executive Office of the Association, OCLC 31342682:
      And I think I can divine two classes of agitators from whom we may apprehend danger. I name them together as the sciolists and the socialists. The sciolist is dangerous in politics, as elsewhere, because his knowledge is imperfect and superficial and his conceit is apt to be in proportion to his ignorance.
    • 1963, Federal Assembly of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, Debates of the Federal Assembly, volume 19, Salisbury: Printed by the Parliamentary Printers, OCLC 40211007, page 1887:
      Sir, I can only say I believe that he is a sciolist. Sciolist is an odd word. I am sure you know what it means, Mr. Speaker, but for those who do not, it means a person who believes he knows in fact more than he does.
    • 2003, Roy Porter, Flesh in the Age of Reason, London, New York, N.Y.: Allen Lane, ISBN 978-0-7139-9149-9, page 290:
      Walter is [] a dupe to the half-baked speculations of every sciolist from [René] Descartes down to ‘Coglionissimo Borri’, and a pack of other dunces.

Quotations

  • For more examples of usage of this term, see Citations:sciolist.

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