Yea, I also found the claim, as well as a few results from old books before the claim. The name come straight from the Latin though, so isn’t that original or surprising.
Just because it hasn’t been used much before doesn’t mean we can’t start to use it and adjust the definition as we see fit. I want to see more and better terminology in this area.
From the Greek as it happens. Also, alethephobia would be a double negative, with a-letheia meaning a state of not being hidden; a more natural neologism would avoid that double negative. Also, the greek concept of truth has some differences to our own conceptualization. Bad neologism.
The trend of calling things that aren’t fears “-phobia” seems to me a trend that’s harmful for clear communication. Adjusting the definition only leads to more confusion.
I want to see more and better terminology in this area.
I think I want less terminology in this area, and generally more words and longer descriptions for things that need nuance and understanding. Dressing up insults as diagnoses doesn’t help any goals I understand, and jargon should only be introduced as part of much longer analyses where it illuminates rather than obscures.
Yea, I also found the claim, as well as a few results from old books before the claim. The name come straight from the Latin though, so isn’t that original or surprising.
Just because it hasn’t been used much before doesn’t mean we can’t start to use it and adjust the definition as we see fit. I want to see more and better terminology in this area.
> The name comes straight from the Latin though
From the Greek as it happens. Also, alethephobia would be a double negative, with a-letheia meaning a state of not being hidden; a more natural neologism would avoid that double negative. Also, the greek concept of truth has some differences to our own conceptualization. Bad neologism.
Ah, good to know. Do you have recommendations for other words?
The trend of calling things that aren’t fears “-phobia” seems to me a trend that’s harmful for clear communication. Adjusting the definition only leads to more confusion.
I think I want less terminology in this area, and generally more words and longer descriptions for things that need nuance and understanding. Dressing up insults as diagnoses doesn’t help any goals I understand, and jargon should only be introduced as part of much longer analyses where it illuminates rather than obscures.