illucidus
Illucidus is a term used primarily in philosophy and linguistics to describe statements, arguments, or phenomena that lack clear meaning or logical transparency. It denotes a level of semantic opacity or definitional vagueness that hinders straightforward analysis. As a neologism, illucidus may function as both an adjective and a noun in scholarly writing, with an illucidus proposition being one that resists standard criteria for clarity.
Etymology: The word is formed from the Latin lucidus, meaning clear, with a negative prefix-like formation common
Philosophical usage: Illucidus is employed to flag terms or claims that do not meet explicit criteria for
Linguistic relevance: In linguistics, illucidus is used when addressing semantic opacity, polysemy, and context-dependent meaning. The
See also: Lucidity, Obscurity, Vagueness, Ambiguity, Semantic opacity.