This is about intellect, wisdom, and prudence. They are strange subjects for discussion.
- If you have them, are you going to spend time talking about them?
- If you haven’t got them, what can you say about them?
Apparently I did talk about them with my classmates when we were undergraduates, even freshmen: too young for prudence, although not for wisdom, by Aristotle’s account below, at least in special pursuits such as geometry and mathematics.
Does that sound like wisdom? According to the Concise Oxford Dictionary (6th edition, 1976), wisdom is
experience and knowledge together with the power of applying them critically or practically; sagacity, prudence, common sense.
Aristotle is talking about σοφία though, and this can mean cleverness. Intellect and prudence are νούς and φρόνησις. Last time we saw the claim that the latter is prudence only in the older sense of “practical judgment,” not the sense of “playing it safe” that is current today.









