Armchair thoughts about wisdom, and how everyday knowledge becomes more valuable.
Some of the linguistic errors in this piece really prevented me from enjoying it, like this sentence: "If you pass easily on an exam, I perfectly sure, you have not learned anything, and it is not because you did not learned it is because you learned only one aspect of the problem." I count at least 3 errors, and the whole sentence seems unwieldy.
Normally I can get around such things, but I had to stop reading too. I think English is a second language here. In fact, you can toggle between several languages on their home screen.
Interesting article, but I'm going to take exception to terminology. Knowing how to do something, I would suggest, is not wisdom. It is knowledge. Wisdom is what happens when you combine knowledge with a crucial element called experience. The longer the experience, coupled with emotional intelligence and knowledge, the deeper the wisdom.