Erudition
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Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Word meaning suffers entropy after years of vulgar usage. In this way erudition has come to mean any learned person. They are not the same. An erudite person is necessarily learned but a learned person is not necessarily erudite. The critical difference is that the erudite person strove to overcome rudeness while the merely learned did not, herein lies the virtue.
An erudite person will gain insight on particular subjects directly through books and study, rather than by following a course or scholarship in the subject. The famous Italian poet Giacomo Leopardi was erudite: he read and studied the classics on his own, and was deeply influenced by many philosophers. Among the most erudite of Roman writers was Marcus Terentius Varro. Among the most erudite English essay-writers is Sir Thomas Browne.
A jurist is one who is learned, and knows the law intimately and thoroughly; by comparison, an erudite jurist also knows the history of the law in detail, as well as the laws of other cultures.
Erudition is evident in a literary work when an erudite writer possesses a general knowledge spanning many different fields. When such universal scholars are also at the forefront of several fields, they are sometimes called "polymaths". When they are not, or are only at the forefront of individual fields (sometimes in a figurehead or leadership capacity), they are sometimes called "polyhistors."
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