word usage - Is it OK to use hyperopic to refer to farsightedness metaphorically?
I have seen the word myopic used metaphorically to refer to a person who is very short-sighted (can't anticipate the consequences of their actions). Of course myopic is also used in the medical sense to refer to a person who is literally short-sighted.
Is hyperopic also commonly used this way to refer to a person who has exceptional planning abilities and can anticipate consequences easily? Are there examples of it being used this way? Dictionaries define it in the medical sense only.
Answer
In general few would use a negative medical condition to describe a positive trait.
This would be the equivalent of saying that some has hypertrophic cardiomyopathy when you mean they have a big heart.
Foresightedness (n.) is a far more positive way to say this than farsightedness (n.). While farsightedness is acceptable, it still carries an initial "recoil" as a negative before it gets reinterpreted as potentially positive.
His foresightedness was legendary.
He possessed great foresight.
He was foresighted.
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