The Just Word: Clarity as a Sign of Understanding
The Birth of Intelligibility. AI image The Suspicion Toward Clarity When an idea resists clear expression, the obstacle is not always its depth; often it signals that thought has not yet reached its final stage. Intellectual culture has long harbored a quiet suspicion toward clarity, as though lucidity diminished seriousness. Dense prose is often mistaken for rigor, while transparent language risks being read as naïve. Yet this opposition is misleading. Difficulty and profundity are not synonyms, and obscurity is no guarantee of insight. We may therefore begin with a simple question: is darkness the mark of thought at its limits, or does it occasionally signal that thinking has not yet reached its mature form? Clarity as the Result of Discipline Clarity is rarely immediate. It is the visible outcome of a long discipline. What appears effortless on the page typically conceals years of hesitation, revision, and conceptual reordering. To render something intelligible w...