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SeriousQuestion
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But don’t you need to know which love saves and how to obtain this love. In a way wisdom is required.
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So, are you making a distinction between the feeling of love and a loving action? If so, I agree.Wisdom is also a cerebral thing, we learn wisdom but love I see a far harder thing to feel in my opinion. Agape is easier, a charitable disposition towards ours and wishing them only well, but actual love is tricky.
Even the love I felt for my parents was conditional after all, if I’d been beaten or starved I may well have still felt a need for them but not love. Love is a complex thing compared to wisdom.
Yeah, no. I mean, I tend to think of knowledge as necessary for but insufficient to be wisdom. For example, Hitler said, “If you tell a lie loud enough and often enough, the masses will believe it.” This is certainly true, but is it wise to propagate lies on a mass scale in the first place? Hitler had understanding of human psychology, but I wouldn’t say he was wise! Right?Put it this way - Hitler, Stalin and Pol Pot were fully as worldly wise as Gandhi or Lincoln or Martin Luther King. None of then could have done what they did without a large measure of wisdom.
What made the difference was love - lack of which steered the first group towards evil and destruction and having of which steered the second group towards building up and doing good for their fellow humans.
Agreed! None but Christ, perhaps many saints, and a few blessed Catholic Thomists!Yes, I remember studies on altruism being very interesting, psychology.
I also think others here are right when they are saying basically that wisdom without love is not good. I’d say wisdom without love is severely depleted. However who can put hand on heart and say that they love unconditionally and universally? Parents can say that of the love they have for their children but universal unconditional love? I think perhaps very few human beings have been able to achieve that.
Wise fellow that St. Bernard! Good dog breed, too, if you can get past the drooling!(Please Note: This uploaded content is no longer available.)
I tend to think (and perhaps I’m mistaken) that both wisdom and love are thoughts, rather than actions.Wisdom is also a cerebral thing, we learn wisdom but love I see a far harder thing to feel in my opinion. Agape is easier, a charitable disposition towards ours and wishing them only well, but actual love is tricky.
Not sure about that. Isn’t loving the wisest thing one can do? If it is, than can one who never loves ever be said to be wise?Even fools can love. But many a wise person cannot love.
If you are saying the emotion of compassion is never inandofitself flawed, you might be right! Regarding wisdom, I guess I’m defining it as correctly discerning God’s desire for a specific situation. Such accurate discernment would exclude the errors in reasoning you mention. Such errors would result in unwise decisions, I believe, and what is unwise can never be wisdom, although it can be knowledge. Make sense?Yes.
Wisdom and love are both cerebral in origin. However wisdom is based on knowledge and knowledge can be flawed or erroneous or inferred wrongly and in short can be faulty.
Love by which I refer to what we commonly call love is not prone to such flaws surely?
Oh, you’re fine! Thanks for the thoughtful conversation.I’m going to have to think about this for a while. As an aside I assume you’ve heard of occums (possibly mispelt) razor? I personally try to keep things simple and I do believe that complications are the hallmark of man kind.
I’ll think about this if you don’t mind.
Not sure what you mean by capacity in this instance. Please explain.Yet love is a matter of capacity, not wisdom.