but still, it seems pretty silly to me—trying to appear deep by turning our expectations on their head.
This quote isn’t just about seeming deep, it refers to a frequently observed phenomenon. I think two main reasons for it are that intellectuals are better at rationalizing beliefs they arrived at for non-smart reasons (there is even a theory that some intellectuals signal their intelligence by rationalizing absurd beliefs) and the fact that they’re frequently in ivory towers where day to day reality is less available.
Not to accuse Orwell of being anti-intellectual in general
I remember Tetlock’s Expert Political Judgment suggested a different mechanism for intelligence to be self-defeating: clever arguing. In a forecaster’s field of expertise, they have more material with which to justify unreasonable positions and refute reasonable ones, and therefore they are more able to resist the force of reality.
This quote isn’t just about seeming deep, it refers to a frequently observed phenomenon. I think two main reasons for it are that intellectuals are better at rationalizing beliefs they arrived at for non-smart reasons (there is even a theory that some intellectuals signal their intelligence by rationalizing absurd beliefs) and the fact that they’re frequently in ivory towers where day to day reality is less available.
Depends on which type of anti-intellectualism you’re referring to.
I remember Tetlock’s Expert Political Judgment suggested a different mechanism for intelligence to be self-defeating: clever arguing. In a forecaster’s field of expertise, they have more material with which to justify unreasonable positions and refute reasonable ones, and therefore they are more able to resist the force of reality.