Polymath

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A Polymath is a person who ...



References

2017

  • (Wikipedia, 2017) ⇒ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/polymath Retrieved:2017-6-23.
    • A polymath ("having learned much")[1] is a person whose expertise spans a significant number of different subject areas; such a person is known to draw on complex bodies of knowledge to solve specific problems.

      The term was first used in the 17th century; the related term, polyhistor, is an ancient term with similar meaning. [2] Polymaths include the great thinkers of the Renaissance and the Enlightenment who excelled at several fields in science and the arts. In the Italian Renaissance, the idea of the polymath was expressed by Leon Battista Alberti (1404–1472), in the statement that "a man can do all things if he will". [3] Embodying a basic tenet of Renaissance humanism, that humans are limitless in their capacity for development, the concept led to the notion that people should embrace all knowledge and develop their capacities as fully as possible. This is expressed in the term "Renaissance man" — often applied to the gifted people of that age who sought to develop their abilities in all areas of accomplishment: intellectual, artistic, social, and physical. The term entered the lexicon in the twentieth century, and has now been applied to great thinkers living before and after the Renaissance.

  1. The term was first recorded in written English in the early seventeenth century
  2. Far from suggesting or implying a distinction — such as, a distinction between math and history — the terms "polymath" and "polyhistor" are [very nearly] synonyms (as indicated by the similarities in their Wiktionary entries, polymath and polyhistor).
  3. [1]