This suggests that every person that goes inside when it starts raining is wise.Intelligence and wisdom are two different ways of being smart. The way I've heard them being described is like this, if you feel wet drops on your arm intelligence tells you its raining and wisdom tells you to go inside — HardWorker
The way I've heard them being described is like this, if you feel wet drops on your arm intelligence tells you its raining and wisdom tells you to go inside. — HardWorker
So,I guess you are saying that wisdom is the correct application of knowledge and intelligence is just having that knowledge.Knowledge is power, energy. Intelligence is potential, wisdom is kinetic."
Neither. It's instinct. — Caldwell
A philosopher contemplates these ^misuses and ^^abuses of intelligences and, ideally, s/he performs reflective exercises daily (e.g vide P. Hadot) to habitualize reducing both the occurrences and scope of their adverse effects. Study, exercise and dialectical discussions like this constitute my (yoga-like, martial arts-like) 'philosophical regimen'. I believe that to seek wisdom is to seek what 'the wise' seek: mastery of opposing-reducing both ^foolery & ^^stupidity. In a pragmatic sense, at most one strives to grow less foolish, even less stupid, in due course, perhaps always approaching like a horizon but never arriving – or like Sisyphus and his 'philosopher's stone' – always with intelligence seeking, persevering, loving wisdom, even though the Muse (daimon?) remains ever out of reach (vide I. Murdoch re: erotics of The Good; Spinoza re: amor dei intellectualis; et al).• Intelligence corresponds to aptitudes for learning and creativity.
• Wisdom corresponds to the competence of using intelligence without either misusing intelligence (i.e. fallacious reasoning, bias, delusions) or abusing intelligence (i.e. maladaptive, or immiserating, conduct).
Which one to explain -- the meaning of instinct? Or the reaction of human to rain falling on him?explain — I love Chom-choms
Chaotic data?
Refine data so that makes sense? = information
Organize information into a comprehensive map of reality= knowledge
When enough diverse knowledge is obtained, the opposites of perspectives cancel out resulting in emptiness of opposition, and one obtains poised equilibrium resulting in behavior that is in Buddhism called the 'middle way' and in Christianity 'straight and narrow' = wisdom? — Yohan
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DIKW_pyramid
"Typically information is defined in terms of data, knowledge in terms of information, and wisdom in terms of knowledge". — Hermeticus
Data→Information→Knowledge→WisdomData→Information→Knowledge→Wisdom
— Neil deGrasse Tyson
What do the arrows represent? Anyone? — TheMadFool
No progress can be made without thinking and experience is essential to get from knowledge to wisdom.
A high IQ and book learning doesn't equal wisdom. We need the experience to understand the meaning of all that knowledge.
Zeus was afraid once man had the technology of fire he would discover all other technologies and then forget the gods. I think that is technology without wisdom. — Athena
If you ask me, a high IQ eliminates the need for experience and vice versa. Of course, we would be better off having the best of both worlds but if given a choice, I'd opt for IQ instead of experience: as Yohan put it in a thread on life advice which has been deleted, "learn from other's nistakes". — TheMadFool
Refine data so that makes sense? = information
Organize information into a comprehensive map of reality= knowledge
When enough diverse knowledge is obtained, the opposites of perspectives cancel out resulting in emptiness of opposition, and one obtains poised equilibrium resulting in behavior that is in Buddhism called the 'middle way' and in Christianity 'straight and narrow' = wisdom? — Yohan
Well, when it comes to a high IQ I will never achieve that and I have known people with a lower IQ than mine who are pretty wise. — Athena
Intelligence and wisdom are two different ways of being smart. The way I've heard them being described is like this, if you feel wet drops on your arm intelligence tells you its raining and wisdom tells you to go inside
— HardWorker
This suggests that every person that goes inside when it starts raining is wise.
An obviously false conjecture.
I will now assume that your definition.
So change the definition.
I honestly don't understand either so I will try to prove you wrong but I can't add anything thing else. — I love Chom-choms
School of hard knocks, not everyone wants to go there. — TheMadFool
I am not sure what you mean by that. — Athena
I can't say what 'the good life' is but I can't conceive of it not including
amor dei intellectualisdeus, sive natura
ataraxia
aponia
apatheia (i.e. amor fati)
solitaire et solidaire (i.e. non serviam)
& getting one's kicks. — 180 Proof
I'm an 'epicurean-spinozist' (or absurdist) meaning that aponia & ataraxia without transcendent illusions (or sisyphusean eudaimonia) is (my) "hedonism". — 180 Proof
My life-long aspiration :point: gnóthi seautón ... panta rhei ... pan metron ariston ... tetrapharmakos —> aponia, ataraxia (& eudaimonia) ... apatheia ... — 180 Proof
:death: :flower:Platonism is too other-worldly – escapist (e.g. gnostic) – for cultivating ataraxia, aponia & apatheia here and now in this world ... — 180 Proof
Platonism is too other-worldly – escapist (e.g. gnostic) – for cultivating ataraxia, aponia & apatheia here and now in this world ... — 180 Proof
With understanding comes acceptance. Acceptance can never happen without understanding. Resignation is as what you mused above -- one has no choice or lacks energy to quarrel.What's the difference between acceptance and resignation? — TheMadFool
If you're alluding to apatheia, maybe the difference is between active indifference and passive indifference ...What's the difference between acceptance and resignation? — TheMadFool
No. Congenitally (though not necessarily incorrigibly) foolish.Are we wise ...
No. Akratic as I've mentioned already.OR are we helpless
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