nescience

noun·/ˈnɛs.i.əns/

Ignorance, especially considered as a state with consequences. What one does not know, and perhaps ought to. Nescience points to a deficit that matters: knowledge missing where judgment is required.

His nescience wasn’t innocence; it was the kind of not-knowing that comes from never bothering to look.

Etymology

From Latin nescientia "ignorance," from nescire "not to know." A scholastic naming of ignorance as a condition, not an excuse.

Related Words

ignorancethe common equivalent
incognizancelack of knowledge; more legalistic
nescientadjectival form
agnosticisma principled “not knowing” in certain domains