“Cogno-intellectual” was the catchphrase for this when I was in school. See Abrahams et al.:
We invite you to take part in a large-scale language experiment. It concerns the word “cogno-intellectual.” This noble word can be used as an adjective or as a noun. We just invented it. The fact that “cogno-intellectual” has no meaning makes it a useful word. Meaning nothing, it can be used for anything.
Here is the experiment. Use the word “cogno-intellectual” in written and oral communications with colleagues, especially with colleagues whom you do not know well. If you are a student, use it with your most impressable teachers. If you are a teacher, use it with your most impressable administrators. Use it at meetings. Use it with significant strangers. Use it with abandon. Use it with panache. The main thing is: use it.
Anti-ludic has meaning, though. It means “against playfulness”. Nobody may have used it yet, but that doesn’t mean that you can’t combine roots to make a new and meaningful word.
post-catalytic
psycho-elemental
anti-ludic
anarcho-hegemonic
desublimational
“Cogno-intellectual” was the catchphrase for this when I was in school. See Abrahams et al.:
To see the word used spectacularly, check out this paper: www.es.ele.tue.nl/~tbasten/fun/rhetoric_logic.pdf
LW comments use the Markdown syntax.
Was that meant to be a link?
It was. I can’t get the ‘show help’ menu to pop-up, so I feel frustratingly inept right now. :)
Put the text you want to display in square brackets, and the URL you want to go to in regular brackets. That should do it.
Anti-ludic has meaning, though. It means “against playfulness”. Nobody may have used it yet, but that doesn’t mean that you can’t combine roots to make a new and meaningful word.