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Concisely put, someone who has a deep knowledge of something gains, as a result, the capacity to appropriately hide its complexity through simple metaphor. When someone doesn't understand as well, he or she cannot as easily extrapolate a simple metaphor, and can only give a technical answer. When someone doesn't understand at all, he or she might simply hide behind impressive-sounding words. This is largely because the knowledgeable individual is much more confident about leaving out technical details, because he or she knows which details are unimportant for a given context. The less-knowledgeable has not not yet developed a feel for which technical details are really important in understanding a given concept. So, while an explanation filled with technical detail doesn't automatically mean the speaker/author is not knowledgeable, it does tend to work out that way.
<–radiant.matrix–>
A collection of thoughts and links from the minds of geeks The Code that can be seen is not the true Code I haven't found a problem yet that can't be solved by a well-placed trebuchet In reply to Re^3: Second rate programmers and my confession
by radiantmatrix
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