“Wisdom is, I suppose, the right use of knowledge. To know is not to be wise. Many men know a great deal, and are all the greater fools for it. There is no fool so great a fool as a knowing fool. But to know how to use knowledge is to have wisdom.”

The Fourfold Treasure (1871) No. 991 http://www.spurgeon.org/sermons/0991.htm

Adopted from Wikiquote. Last update Sept. 28, 2023. History

Help us to complete the source, original and additional information

Do you have more details about the quote "Wisdom is, I suppose, the right use of knowledge. To know is not to be wise. Many men know a great deal, and are all th…" by Charles Spurgeon?
Charles Spurgeon photo
Charles Spurgeon 49
British preacher, author, pastor and evangelist 1834–1892

Related quotes

Oliver Wendell Holmes photo

“Controversy equalizes fools and wise men in the same way, — and the fools know it.”

Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809–1894) Poet, essayist, physician

The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table (1858)
Context: Do you think I don't understand what my friend, the Professor, long ago called the hydrostatic paradox of controversy?
Don't know what it means? - Well, I will tell you. You know, that, if you had a bent tube, one arm of which was of the size of a pipe-stem, and the other big enough to hold the ocean, water would stand at the same height in one as in the other. Controversy equalizes fools and wise men in the same way, — and the fools know it.

William Shakespeare photo

“The fool doth think he is wise, but the wise man knows himself to be a fool.”

Touchstone, Act V, scene i
Source: As You Like It (1599–1600)

Anatole France photo

“The fool doth think he is wise, but the wise man knows himself to be a fool.”

Anatole France (1844–1924) French writer

Touchstone, Act V, scene i
Misattributed

Piet Hein photo

“True wisdom knows
it must comprise
some nonsense
as a compromise,
lest fools should fail
to find it wise.”

Piet Hein (1905–1996) Danish puzzle designer, mathematician, author, poet

Lest Fools Should Fail
Grooks

William Shakespeare photo
Plutarch photo

“Cato used to assert that wise men profited more by fools than fools by wise men; for that wise men avoided the faults of fools, but that fools would not imitate the good examples of wise men.”

Plutarch (46–127) ancient Greek historian and philosopher

Life of Marcus Cato
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919)

Solomon photo

“The fear of the LORD is the beginning of knowledge: but fools despise wisdom and instruction.”

Solomon (-990–-931 BC) king of Israel and the son of David

[Proverbs, 1:7, KJV] (KJV)

Samuel Johnson photo
Joseph Stalin photo

“You know, they are fooling us, there is no God.”

Joseph Stalin (1879–1953) General secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union

A teenaged Stalin to a fellow student while studying to become a priest in the Russian Orthodox Church, as quoted in Landmarks in the Life of Stalin (1942) by Yemelyan Yaroslavsky, p. 9
Contemporary witnesses

Claude McKay photo

“I know the dark delight of being strange,
The penalty of difference in the crowd,
The loneliness of wisdom among fools”

Claude McKay (1889–1948) Jamaican American writer, poet

Complete Poems, University of Illinois Press, 2004, p. 348

Related topics