ABSTRUSELY - meaning and definition. What is ABSTRUSELY
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What (who) is ABSTRUSELY - definition


Abstrusely      
·adv In an abstruse manner.
abstruse         
  • [[Aristotle]]
  • The computer scientist [[Bill Joy]] proposed controlling the public's access to certain data, information, and knowledge, because the public cannot handle the truth.
  • The economist [[Friedrich August von Hayek]]
  • [[G. W. F. Hegel]]
  • In the 18th century, the [[Marquis de Condorcet]] was a political scientist who correctly perceived obscurantism as a contributing cause of the French Revolution in 1789.
  • [[Karl Marx]] in 1861
AIMING TO HIDE INFORMATION OR INSIGHT
Obscurantist; Obscurantists; Obscuritanism; Abstruseness; Abstruse
a.
Recondite, remote, occult, profound, hidden, transcendental, obscure, difficult, dark, vague, indefinite, enigmatical, mysterious, mystic, mystical, high, abstract, abstracted, subtile, refined, attenuated, rarified.
Abstruse         
  • [[Aristotle]]
  • The computer scientist [[Bill Joy]] proposed controlling the public's access to certain data, information, and knowledge, because the public cannot handle the truth.
  • The economist [[Friedrich August von Hayek]]
  • [[G. W. F. Hegel]]
  • In the 18th century, the [[Marquis de Condorcet]] was a political scientist who correctly perceived obscurantism as a contributing cause of the French Revolution in 1789.
  • [[Karl Marx]] in 1861
AIMING TO HIDE INFORMATION OR INSIGHT
Obscurantist; Obscurantists; Obscuritanism; Abstruseness; Abstruse
·adj Concealed or hidden out of the way.
II. Abstruse ·adj Remote from apprehension; difficult to be comprehended or understood; recondite; as, abstruse learning.
Examples of use of ABSTRUSELY
1. Where Yeats evolved a heroic grand style, and collected a symbol–hoard which included elements of the arcane and the abstrusely systematic (Byzantium and the gyres), Heaney has usually stayed near to home and – even when travelling – remained closely involved with familiar things–in–themselves.
2. Or, more appropriately, though rather more abstrusely, could she have been thinking of Rumour in Henry IV part 2, which with "covert enmity/Under the smile of safety wounds the world"? For whatever reason, such Shakespearean comparisons are, at root, a compliment.