Aberrant (pronounced uh-ber-uhnt or ab-er-uhnt)
(1)
Departing from the normal or usual course.
(2)
In zoology & botany, deviating from the ordinary, natural type; an
exceptional or abnormal example (which can be applied to an individual specimen
or an entire species, in the case of the latter the aberrant point producing a
new normative type).
(3)
As a moral judgement, straying from the right way; deviating from morality or
truth.
1560-1610:
From the Latin aberrant (stem of aberrāns), present participle of aberrāre (to deviate), present active
participle of aberrō (go astray;
err), the construct being ab- (from)
+ errō (to wander). The word was rare prior to the mid-nineteenth
century when it became widely used in botany and zoology to describe any example
deviating from the ordinary or natural type in the sense of producing something
exceptional or abnormal and the seminal text in this context is of course
Charles Darwin’s (1809-1882) On the Origin of Species (1859) although he and
others had previously published work in this vein: “The more aberrant any form is, the greater must have been the number of
connecting forms which, on my theory, have been exterminated.” Despite the origins of the construct in Latin
seeming to suggest something associated with “error”, and that does appear to
have been the flavor of the original sixteenth century sense, it was always
possible for the word to be used as a neutral descriptor (something differing
from the norm). Certainly, in zoology
& botany, something aberrant was merely something different and of
necessity there was no notion of good or bad although that certainly could be
ascribed.
It
was by the mid-eighteenth century that the notion of the “aberrant” became so
associated with “aberrant sexual conduct” (especially homosexuality), lending
the word a loading which it carries to this day and as an expression of
disapprobation based on moral or religious constructs, the synonym most often
appropriate in this is “deviant” (from that defined as normative) and it’s
often used in conjunction with “abhorrent” or “abomination” which carries some
Old Testament baggage. Essentially, when
borrowed by the moralists from the scientists, it came to mean “deviating from
morality or truth”, that somewhat removed from a shrub known for its red
flowers beginning to yield purple. In
some uses it is definitely neutral such as astronomy where it describes behaviour
which is novel, unexpected or unique. The
synonyms (and these vary in utility according to context) historically included
strange, abnormal, atypical exceptional, bizarre, different, odd, unusual, and
later devious, errant, immoral, psycho, weird, deviant, flaky, mental, peculiar
& queer (in senses both ancient & modern). Aberrant is a noun & adjective, aberrance
& aberrancy are adjectives and aberrantly is an adverb; the noun plural is aberrant.
Lindsay Lohan and her lawyer in court, Los Angeles, December 2011.
Aberration (pronounced ab-uh-rey-shun)
(1)
The act of departing from the right, normal, or usual course.
(2)
The act of deviating from the ordinary, usual, or normal type.
(3)
Mental irregularity or disorder, especially of a minor or temporary nature; lapse
from a sound mental state. Most often
associated in the literature with wandering; deviation and divergence.
(4)
In astronomy, the apparent displacement of a celestial body due to the (5)
finite speed of light and the motion of the observer with the earth.
(6)
In optics, any disturbance of the rays of a pencil of light such that they can
no longer be brought to sharp focus or form clear images.
(7)
In photography, a defect in a camera lens or lens system, due to flaws in
design, material, or construction, that can distort the image. These are usually classified into spherical
and chromatic aberrations.
1585-1595;
From Late Latin aberrātiōn (stem of aberrātiō) from the Classical Latin aberrationem (nominative aberratio) and equivalent
to aberrātus, noun of action from
past-participle stem of aberrāre. The meaning in Latin appears never to have
shifted from a literal “wandering or straying or losing one’s way”, no
figurative flourishes ever found in surviving texts. The modern meaning in English (deviation from
normative types) was in use by at least 1846.
Aberration is a noun; the verb aberrate is rare to the point of being
almost unused. Aberration &
aberrationality are nouns, aberrate & aberrating are verbs, aberrational is
an adjective, aberrated is an adjective & verb and aberrationally is an
adverb; the noun plural is aberrations.
Except in scientific use, the verbs aberrate & aberrating are rare
while abberated remains in occasional use
Until the release Broken English (1979), Marianne Faithfull’s discography had been a predictable pastiche of any number of “girl” singers of the 1960s, the music rarely original, usually melodic and pleasing but never with an arrangement which could suggest her voice could be called “interpretative”. Faithless (1978, a repackaged re-release of Dreamin' My Dreams (1976)) was representative of her output, being inoffensive and unmemorable but Broken English was so startlingly different that some reviewers assumed it was a kind of aberration. Subsequent material however confirmed there had been a change of direction, her troubled years resulting in a voice which was described usually as “gin soaked” and the repertoire selected to suit. Thought aberrant at the time, Broken English proved no aberration.
Sir Billy Snedden (1926–1987) who, at 61, breathed his last in a Travelodge at Sydney's Rushcutters Bay, in the company of a somewhat younger woman who was his son’s ex-girlfriend, an event recorded on what was perhaps the Melbourne Truth's most memorable front page. Remarkably, despite decades of speculation, her identity has never publicly been confirmed but it's thought Sir Billy's last liaison was something habitual rather than a temporary aberration.
Politicians like the word aberration because it’s an abstract way of suggesting something “really didn’t happen” and if it did it was someone else’s fault. When the Labor Party won the 1972 Australian general election after having spent 23 years in opposition, one of the head-kickers from the ousted Liberal Party suggested it was “a temporary aberration” and once this unfortunate filing error was fixed, things would get back to normal. That theory needed some nuancing when the Liberals, although making some gains, failed to win the next election in 1974, the revised opinion now it was “a temporary aberration by the voters in Sydney & Melbourne”. That comment attracted some wry comment about “politicians in denial” but the Liberals seemed to have a point when, in 1975, the two big cities also realised their mistake, the Labor administration swept from office in a landslide, an election in which, uniquely, every seat swung against the government. There were special circumstances surrounding the 1975 election, just as there had been an unusual conjunction of electoral conditions between 1949-1972 when Labor endured their long stint in opposition. However, the comment which attracted the most derision in the second “aberration” election was that of the Liberal leader Sir Billy Snedden who, after pondering the results, announced: “We didn’t lose the election; we just didn’t get enough seats to win”. There was much laughter at that but actually, up to a point, Snedden had a point because there have been a number of elections where the losers gained more votes that the winners including the UK in 1951, Australia in 1961 and of course, Crooked Hillary Clinton in 2016.