I prefer a different approach: "smart is good; clever isn't smart". If you have to express something in a clever, that is, highly contrived but actually working way, it means that you lack the right way to express it, and maybe your mental model of the problem is not that good. The theory of epicycles is clever; Kepler's laws are smart.
I prefer a different approach: "smart is good; clever isn't smart". If you have to express something in a clever, that is, highly contrived but actually working way, it means that you lack the right way to express it, and maybe your mental model of the problem is not that good. The theory of epicycles is clever; Kepler's laws are smart.