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Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Thomas Sowell :: Townhall.com Columnist
"Intellectuals"
by Thomas Sowell
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Among the many wonders to be expected from an Obama administration, if Nicholas D. Kristof of the New York Times is to be believed, is ending "the anti-intellectualism that has long been a strain in American life."

He cited Adlai Stevenson, the suave and debonair governor of Illinois, who twice ran for president against Eisenhower in the 1950s, as an example of an intellectual in politics.

Intellectuals, according to Mr. Kristof, are people who are "interested in ideas and comfortable with complexity," people who "read the classics."

It is hard to know whether to laugh or cry.

Adlai Stevenson was certainly regarded as an intellectual by intellectuals in the 1950s. But, half a century later, facts paint a very different picture.

Historian Michael Beschloss, among others, has noted that Stevenson "could go quite happily for months or years without picking up a book." But Stevenson had the airs of an intellectual -- the form, rather than the substance.

What is more telling, form was enough to impress the intellectuals, not only then but even now, years after the facts have been revealed, though apparently not to Mr. Kristof.

That is one of many reasons why intellectuals are not taken as seriously by others as they take themselves.

As for reading the classics, President Harry Truman, whom no one thought of as an intellectual, was a voracious reader of heavyweight stuff like Thucydides and read Cicero in the original Latin. When Chief Justice Fred Vinson quoted in Latin, Truman was able to correct him.

Yet intellectuals tended to think of the unpretentious and plain-spoken Truman as little more than a country bumpkin.

Similarly, no one ever thought of President Calvin Coolidge as an intellectual. Yet Coolidge also read the classics in the White House. He read both Latin and Greek, and read Dante in the original Italian, since he spoke several languages. It was said that the taciturn Coolidge could be silent in five different languages.

The intellectual levels of politicians are just one of the many things that intellectuals have grossly misjudged for years on end.

During the 1930s, some of the leading intellectuals in America condemned our economic system and pointed to the centrally planned Soviet economy as a model-- all this at a time when literally millions of people were starving to death in the Soviet Union, from a famine in a country with some of the richest farmland in Europe and historically a large exporter of food. Continued...

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About The Author
Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institute and author of The Housing Boom and Bust.
 
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Intellect

Preschool, Elementary School, High School, College, and Graduate School.

Where are the hurdles most of have to negociate in life?

True wisdom is the overcoming of suffering and sin, All true wisdom is therefore touched with sadness.
Whittaker Chambers

This is a man of great intellect who looked inside and outside and discoverd truth. It is a painfull and fearful journey but the rewards are immeasurable.

The intellectual elite, as they see themselves, are all for the most part, imposters!



Bonnie
Graduating with honors is hardly a measure of "intelligence" with the post '70s gradeflation at liberal ivy league colleges in effect. When I graduated from a top 15 college, the prevalent ideology in grading was: "Jesus Christ would get an A, Socrates a B, and the rest Cs, Ds, and Fs." There were no "magnas" and only one "summa" (majoring in Art) in my graduating class.

If he released his transcripts, which he won't, I'm sure his "genius" IQ would dispell all doubts.

As the lady in the commercial said: "Where's the beef?"
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