scholar
Noun
1 a learned person (especially in the
humanities); someone who by long study has gained mastery in one or
more disciplines [syn:
scholarly
person,
student]
2 someone (especially a child) who learns (as
from a teacher) or takes up knowledge or beliefs [syn:
learner,
assimilator]
3 a student who holds a scholarship
English
Etymology
etyl
ang
scolere, from late etyl
la
scholaris, from schola.
Pronunciation
- a UK
/ˈskɒlə/, /"skQl@/
- a US
/ˈskɑlɚ/, /"skA:l@`/
- Rhymes: -ɒlə(r)
Noun
- A student; one who
studies at school or
college.
- A specialist in a
particular branch of knowledge.
- A learned person.
- One who educates themself for their whole life.
Translations
specialist in a particular branch of knowledge
Scholarly method — or as it is more
commonly called, scholarship — is the body of principles
and practices used by scholars to make their claims about the world
as valid and trustworthy as possible, and to make them known to the
scholarly public. In its broadest sense, scholarship can be taken
to include the
scientific
method, which is the body of scholarly practice that governs
the sciences. This article focuses on scholarship in the narrower
sense, covering rational inquiry in areas that are mostly too
complex to yet be treated by science. These include
history as well as the creations
of the human mind in the form of
art,
music,
literature,
religion,
philosophy, and
cultural beliefs.
Scholars
At present, scholarship is largely the domain of
professional specialists, most of whom work as academics in
universities,
research
institutes, and
museums; see
Academia. However,
there are also scholars who support themselves by writing
nonfiction books or other publishable material; for example, the
historian Barbara
Tuchman was such a scholar, as is
Dava Sobel.
The military historian
John Keegan
worked for many years as an academic but is now an independent
scholar. Lastly, there are scholars who work at the highest level
but are amateurs, supporting themselves with an independent
fortune, with day jobs, or by the generosity of others. Such
scholars played a far more important role prior to the twentieth
century; for examples, see
Charles
Darwin,
Heinrich
Schliemann, and
Karl Marx. For
more on amateur scholarship, see
independent
scholar.
Scholarship often attracts special personalities,
particularly in those societies where it is not highly valued by
the vernacular culture. Often, scholars are thought of as being cut
off from their colloquial culture and intensely absorbed by their
topic of study. Nevertheless, the impulse to become a scholar seems
to be widespread. Those who teach in universities find that some of
their students get "bitten by the bug" of scholarship, and feel
impelled to pursue the scholarly impulse despite the dubious
prospects for job security that a scholarly career affords.
Data gathering
Scholars value data that is directly connected to
observation, for
example, data taken from examining a composer's or author's
manuscript, the proceedings of parliamentary debates, or diary
entries. Such data are called
primary
sources. Sources that synthesize and interpret information from
primary sources are
secondary
sources, and works that depend on secondary sources are called
tertiary sources. Tertiary sources are not without value--sometimes
a work of tertiary scholarship is acclaimed for its insight--but
scholars trust facts better when they come from lower-level
sources.
One "source" of data that scholars generally
consider unreliable is a scholar's own memory. This form of data
storage often transforms facts into pseudo-facts, which are perhaps
more vivid and entertaining, or which fit better with the scholar's
own world view; see
Urban
legend. The process of gradual transformation that occurs when
material is stored in human memory, particularly when it is also
transmitted by word of mouth, has been documented by scholars in
folklore and
cultural
anthropology.
To be sure, a scholar who can keep many facts in
his or her head at once has a better chance of seizing upon an
important new generalization, or of having a useful new idea. But a
finished scholarly product is expected to be rechecked against
primary and secondary sources.
Techniques in data gathering
Many scholars make use of technology to obtain
data. For instance, special forms of lighting often serve to reveal
otherwise-indecipherable writing on old manuscripts, particularly
palimpsests.
X-rays and other
scanning techniques can reveal paintings that were covered up by
later work, or the stages by which a particular painting was
created.
Text
corpora also involve special
methods. In the pre-
computer era, many scholars
created
concordances
to important texts, such as the works of
Shakespeare.
In a concordance, one may look up a particular word and find all
the locations where it occurs in the corpus. Concordances are now
rendered largely obsolete by computers, which permit a large corpus
of text to be searched very rapidly, and also allow for much more
flexible searching methods than a concordance would. A number of
important on-line text corpora currently exist and are still being
expanded, such as the
Gutenberg
Project and the
Perseus
Project.
Interpreting primary data
Often, obtaining data from primary sources
involves the scholar in issues of interpretation. For example,
older English literature dates from a time when spelling was not
yet standardized, and sometimes it is not easy to determine what an
author meant. The pronunciation of words long ago was often
different, making it hard to infer the correct
scansion
of lines of poetry. In such cases, careful study of parallel
material from the same historical period can often shed light on
the question. For older pronunciations, consultation of the oldest
dictionaries and use
of the
comparative
method can help.
Many older texts, such as the
Bible or
classical literature, were
originally transmitted only in hand-copied form. Special methods
have been developed for systematic comparison of the oldest copies,
which can help in determining which sources are earliest and in
locating interpolations and scribal error; see
philology.
Scholarly procedure
Scholarly communities use a number of methods to
promulgate scholarship and to verify and improve its quality. For
more on this topic, see
Academia.
Publication
Works of scholarship are often published in
scholarly
journals. Like
magazines, journals are
periodical publications, but they differ in important ways. First,
they are typically open to submissions from any person (though
submissions from individuals plainly lacking knowledge of the field
are usually promptly rejected). Second, the mission of the journal
is taken to be the dissemination of scholarly findings, rather than
the entertainment or personal edification of its readers. (It is
not unknown, of course, for one scholar to find another's work to
be enjoyable, but this is not the main purpose of publication.)
Third, all quality journals carry out peer review, in which a
submitted article is sent for examination by (what the editor hopes
will be) competent and impartial referees. Ideally, articles that
lack scholarly quality will receive negative evaluations from the
referees, and the editor of the journal will reject the submission
or ask for changes before it is resubmitted (possibly with another
round of review). For a detailed account of this process, see
Peer
review.
The procedures of peer review are also followed,
at least to some extent, when a scholar seeks to publish his or her
findings in the form of a
book, as a chapter in a
jointly-authored book, or in a Web-based electronic journal.
Citation
Contributions to scholarly venues are expected to
provide bibliographic
citations to earlier work in
the same area. This permits readers to put the claims to a better
test by consulting the earlier work. Authors often engage earlier
work directly, explaining why they agree or differ from earlier
views. Ideally, sources are primary (firsthand), recent, with good
ethos, credentials, and
citations.
In principle, citation implies that there is a
community of scholars, working together to expand and improve the
scholarly edifice. To be sure, academia contains a number of
scholars who pursue their own line, citing others little or not at
all. Such scholars work at their own risk: they are often (though
not always) considered to be
cranks or
to have lost the skill or knowledge needed to participate in
scholarly debate.
Some have questioned the authority assumed or
conferred by citation, considering it endlessly recursive, the
authority of a work resting on its citations, the authority of
which in turn rely on their citations.
Personnel
Agencies that employ scholars (most notably
universities) often
attempt to replicate the scholarly process in their personnel
evaluations. Thus, in promotion or
tenure cases, the scholarly work
of the candidate is sent out for additional peer review from other
scholars, often anonymous to the candidate. The goal of such
procedures is to retain only scholars of proven ability and
accomplishment in professional positions, and to reward the better
scholars through promotion. See
professor.
See also
academic,
academician,
aficionado,
amateur,
auditor,
authority,
autodidact,
bookman,
bookworm,
brain,
buff,
classicist,
clerk, colossus of knowledge,
connoisseur,
critic,
dilettante,
doctor,
educatee,
egghead,
elder, elder statesman,
experimental scientist,
expert,
fan,
freak,
genius, giant of learning, great
soul,
guru,
highbrow,
humanist,
illuminate,
inquirer,
intellect,
intellectual, learned
clerk, learned man,
learner, literary man,
litterateur,
longhair, lover of learning,
lover of wisdom,
mahatma, man of intellect, man
of learning, man of letters, man of science, man of wisdom,
mandarin,
master,
mastermind,
mentor, mine of information,
monitor,
nut,
oracle,
pedagogue,
philologist,
philologue,
philomath,
philosophe,
philosopher,
polyhistor,
polymath, practical scientist,
praepostor,
prefect,
professor,
pundit,
pupil,
rabbi,
rishi,
sage,
sapient,
savant,
scholastic,
schoolboy,
schoolgirl,
schoolman,
scientist,
seer, self-taught person,
specialist,
starets,
student,
studier,
teacher, technical expert,
technician,
technologist,
thinker,
trainee,
undergraduate, walking
encyclopedia, wise man, wise old man