Dictionary Definition
idleness
Noun
2 the trait of being idle out of a reluctance to
work [syn: faineance]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
Noun
- The state of being idle; indolence; inactivity.
- Groundlessness; worthlessness; triviality.
Translations
state of being idle; indolence; inactivity
- Czech: zahálka
- German: Untätigkeit, Stillstand
- Portuguese: inatividade
groundlessness; worthlessness; triviality
Extensive Definition
- For other meanings, including people named Idle, see Idle (disambiguation).
Idle is a term which generally refers to a lack
of motion and/or energy.
Uses
In describing a person or machine, idle means the act of doing nothing or no work (for example: Adolfo Dias is an idle person). This a person who spends his days doing nothing of relative importance could be said to be "idly passing his days." A computer processor or communication circuit is described as idle when it is not being used by any program, application or message. See available line. Similarly, an engine of an automobile may be described as idle when it is running only to sustain its running (not doing any useful work), this is also called tickover (See idle speed). In Canada you can get a fine for idleing in your car for a certain amount of time, depending on the city you are in. Occupying a chat room while performing another activity and saying little or nothing is known as idling. The word idle is also used on the program AIM describing the status of buddies not showing any activity at their computer. Idle is also a small village in West Yorkshire with the Famous Idle working Men's Club of which Michael Jackson is a member. Idle can also be used when calling someone "Idle" in a different manner to the first definition. Many people have described idleness as "multiple emotions combining, anger, boredom etc, to make one Idle."Idleness as dependent upon cultural norms
Typically, when one describes a machine as idle,
it is an objective statement regarding its current state. However,
when used to describe a person, idle typically carries a negative
connotation, with
the assumption that the person is wasting their time by doing
nothing of value. Such a view is reflected in the proverb "an idle mind is the
devil´s workshop". This interpretation of idleness is not universal
- it is more typically associated with Western cultures. Other
cultures believe that simply being (doing nothing) has its own
value, and they may also reject the West's definition of what is
nothing and what is
not.
Books on Idleness
The state of being idle is sometimes even
celebrated with a few books on the subject of Idleness. How to Be
Idle by Tom
Hodgkinson is one such example from an author who is also known
for his magazine -
"The
Idler", devoted to promoting its ethos of "idle living".
Nobel
Laureate Bertrand
Russell's In Praise of Idleness; And other essays http://www.zpub.com/notes/idle.html
is another book that explores the virtues of being idle in the
modern society.
Mitchell Stevens has published a small
mini-series magazine entitled "How idle are you?" which goes over
basic idle concepts. (Source: North Shore Times Advertiser)
Mark Slouka published his essay, "Quitting the
Paint Factory: The Virtues of Idleness"
http://adamantine.wordpress.com/stuff/quitting-the-paint-factory-by-mark-slouka/
in the November 2004 Harper's
Magazine, hinting at a post-scarcity
economy, and linking conscious busy-ness with antidemocratic and
fascist
tendencies.
See also
idleness in German: Müßiggang
idleness in French: Oisiveté
idleness in Japanese: アイドリング
idleness in Dutch: Idle time
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
a wise passiveness, big deal, cautiousness, circumspection, contemplation,
contemplative life, creeping, dawdling, deliberateness, deliberation, do-nothing
policy, do-nothingism, do-nothingness, dolce far niente, dormancy, drawl, emptiness, flimsiness, foolishness, foot-dragging,
frivolity, frivolousness, futility, idle hands, idle
hours, immobility,
inaction, inactivity, inanity, indolence, inertia, inertness, inoccupation,
laissez-aller, laissez-faire, laissez-faireism, languor, lassitude, laze, laziness, lazing, leisureliness, lentitude, lentor, lethargy, levity, lightness, loafing, lollygagging, malingering, meditation, neutralism, neutrality, neutralness, noninvolvement, nonparticipation,
nonresistance,
nonviolence,
nonviolent resistance, nugacity, otiosity, pacifism, paralysis, passive resistance,
passive self-annihilation, passiveness, passivism, passivity, pokiness, policy, procrastination,
quiescence, quietism, reluctance, shallowness, shiftlessness,
shilly-shallying, shirking, silliness, slackness, slenderness, slightness, sloth, slothfulness, slouch, slowness, sluggardy, sluggishness, stagnancy, stagnation, standpattism, stasis, superficiality, tentativeness, torpor, triflingness, triteness, triviality, trivialness, unemployment, vacuity, vanity, vapidity, vegetation, vita
contemplativa, waiting game, watching and waiting