Source: The Best of All Possible Worlds (2006), Chapter 9, The Common Good, p. 167.
“The prototypical act of the modern intellectual is his abstracting himself from the life of the family. It is an act that has something about it of ritual thaumaturgy—at the beginning of our intellectual careers we are like nothing so much as those young members of Indian tribes who have had a vision or a dream which gives them power on condition that they withdraw from the ordinary life of the tribe. By intellectuality we are freed from the thralldom to the familial commonplace, from the materiality and concreteness by which it exists, the hardness of the cash and hardness of getting it, the inelegance and intractability of family things. It gives us power over intangibles and imponderables such as Beauty and Justice, and it permits us to escape the cosmic ridicule which in our youth we suppose is inevitably directed at those who take seriously the small concerns of the quotidian world, which we know to be inadequate and doomed by the very fact that it is so absurdly conditioned—by things, habits, local and temporary customs, and the foolish errors and solemn absurdities of the men of the past.”
“George Orwell and the politics of truth,” The Opposing Self (1950), p. 163
The Opposing Self (1950)
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Lionel Trilling 30
American academic 1905–1975Related quotes

Source: Better-World Philosophy: A Sociological Synthesis (1899), Egoism and Altruism, pp. 120–121

in 1985 interview https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=11AXDT5824Y with John O'Sullivan
1980s and later

Source: In Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto
“We are all—so to speak—intellectuals about something.”
“The Intellectual in America”, p. 11
A Sad Heart at the Supermarket: Essays & Fables (1962)