We're getting late with these ...
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I've been recently thinking. Mispronunciation of names (books, concepts, intellectuals) is usually taken as a sign that the person in question dosen't really have a place in the debate and is way over his head, faking knowledge for status singaling.
But if the person makes cognisant arguments and generally shows a understanding outside of the mispronunciation what does this really say about him? Why does he then still carry a clear low status penalty? Is this perhaps low status because its a signal that the person while otherwise of sufficient calibre, but displays one or more of the following undesirable traits :
In the modern world, with the advent of the internet, the fraction of people for who c) is true dosen't seem to have increased.
Is perhaps the incentive to discriminate based on point a or b stronger than ever because one can't signal proper class and group affiliations by simply having wide interests and being well read and well versed in various facts (a set of traits now also true of very low status wikipediabingers)? Could this be perhaps related to stronger credential-ism even in circumstances outside of simple economic calculations?
Cheap information in other words means one can't signal high status and intelligence via possessing said newly cheapened information.
Information that is trivially harder to get but that one tends to acquire anyway if one receives his cheap information from the proper sources seems a substitute useful in some circumstance.
Overall I'm not really sure if this is really just about signalling or if its a good heuristic to weed out a stronger onslaught of those who produce only facsimiles of knowledge. One is hard pressed to deny that a culture of intellectual overconfidence has been fostered in certain fields due to cheap information.
I think one possibility you're not considering, and one which applies frequently when mispronunciation is used as a negative signal, is the case of a shibboleth. A mispronunciation becomes a shibboleth when it's frequently discussed, joked about, known in the field. If you fail the shibboleth test, that's evidence that you're not familiar enough with the field to have encountered the test before, and that may legitimately be a negative signal.
E.g. consider the mispronunciation of nuclear as nu-cu-lar, which carries a stigma and is liable to get you mocked.... (read more)