misosopher means one who hates wisdom or knowledge. Lexicurio rates it Sui generis — a strength score of 87 out of 100.
Why “misosopher” is a great word
MISOSOPHER — [Noun] One who hates wisdom or knowledge. From Ancient Greek μῑσόσοφος (mīsósophos), from μῑσέω (mīséō, "to hate") + σοφός (sophós, "wise, wisdom"). Unlike a philosopher, a persistent seeker of understanding, or a misologist, a specific detester of reasoned argument, the misosopher embodies a profound and active contempt for the light of comprehension itself. This is the councilor who burns the library for its ideas, the official who shreds reports for the clean finality of ignorance, the voter who champions a candidate's proud, unreadable smirk—a quiet, bitter refuge in a willful and defended shadow.
Etymology
Borrowed from Ancient Greek μῑσόσοφος (mīsósophos, literally “hater of wisdom”).
noun
- One who hates wisdom or knowledge.