In contemporary English usage, the term
scholar sometimes is equivalent to the term
academic, and describes a university-educated individual who has achieved intellectual mastery of an academic discipline, as instructor and as researcher. Moreover, before the establishment of universities, the term
scholar identified and described an intellectual person whose primary occupation was professional research. In 1847, minister
Emanuel Vogel Gerhart spoke of the role of the scholar in society: Gerhart argued that a scholar can not be focused on a single discipline, contending that knowledge of multiple disciplines is necessary to put each into context and to inform the development of each: A 2011 examination outlined the following attributes commonly accorded to scholars as "described by many writers, with some slight variations in the definition": Scholars may rely on the
scholarly method or scholarship, a body of
principles and
practices used by scholars to make their claims about the world as valid and trustworthy as possible, and to make them known to the scholarly public. It is the methods that systemically advance the teaching, research, and
practice of a given scholarly or academic field of study through
rigorous inquiry. Scholarship is creative, can be documented, can be replicated or elaborated, and can be and is
peer-reviewed through various methods. ==Role in society==