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English
Etymology
From mono- (“one, single”) + Ancient Greek μάθη (máthē, “learning”), from μανθάνω (manthánō, “I learn”). Compare polymath.
Noun
monomath (plural monomaths)
- A person with an extensive knowledge of a single subject or field, but little knowledge of others.
- Coordinate terms: automath, opsimath, polymath
1960, National Review, volume 8, page 52:It is not a refuge for self-indulgent monomaths to channelize their aggressions within a community of colleagues and students.
2006 November 13, Michael Bywater, “Master of all trades”, in New Statesman:We don't like polymaths any more. Perhaps it's because even being a monomath is too difficult now; even specialists specialise only in a small subset of their specialty, and learning is an either/or business.
- 2009, Edward Carr, "The Last Days of the Polymath", Intelligent Life, Autumn 2009:
- Posner first made his name as a monomath. “I had a very big intellectual commitment for many years to anti-trust law. I wrote a lot about that.” Eventually, though, the polymath rose to the surface and he put anti-trust behind him.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:monomath.
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