Knowledge, degrees and diplomas are not for everyone, but wisdom is. True wisdom is in being happy doing what you do best no matter how trivial it may seem as long as it is beneficial to you and to those around you.
Knowledge is kindness.
Darkness reigns when knowledge is silent.
Talking is something which just puts out your persona and tests all your knowledge.
Philosophy is not about acquiring knowledge but about finding the best way to live.
Wisdom is not an exclusive possession of the intellectual parts of the society.
Being articulate is not the same as being wise. Truth devoid of conscience, is worthless in human existence.
Your lack of attention to detail is why no one is paying attention to you. Professionalism, communication and follow through builds real success.
For it is not needful, to use a common proverb, that one should drink up the ocean who wishes to learn that its water is salt.
I wish you were small again, so I could hold you in my arms and comfort you. But you are grown, and you know that for some things there is no comfort.
We can only transform our lives by renewal of mind via renewed knowledge.
Every penny NOT spent on investing in yourself (after basic needs of course) may be a wasted future opportunity from missing learns and connects.
Now there are four chief obstacles in grasping truth, which hinder every man, however learned, and scarcely allow anyone to win a clear title to learning, namely, submission to faulty and unworthy authority, influence of custom, popular prejudice, and concealment of our own ignorance accompanied by an ostentatious display of our knowledge.
Acquiring knowledge through the centuries has influenced human society more than all other factors.
There is no real distinction between who can and cannot be a teacher. All that matters is that this person should have knowledge of the subject matter, empath and compassion with others, and, above all, a great sense of humor which is the true mark of wisdom.
What do I know about life? What does a windmill know about the wind?
What matters is not the facts but how you discover and think about them.
There is no real distinction between who can and cannot be a teacher. All that matters is that this person should have knowledge of the subject matter, empathy and compassion with others, and, above all, a great sense of humor which is the true mark of wisdom.
It is more important that we listen to others than to always be speaking, for in that way we learn what there is to know. We should be easy to talk to, and grateful for new information.
Knowledge alone benefits no one unless the person acquiring it does something with it. And great ideas are worthless unless they are implemented.