A Quote by Arthur Guiterman

Admitting errors clears the score and proves you wiser than before. — © Arthur Guiterman
Admitting errors clears the score and proves you wiser than before.
Admitting Error clears the Score, And proves you Wiser than before.
There should be no shame in admitting to a mistake; after all, we really are only admitting that we are now wiser than we once were.
... the approach of admitting our errors, besides being most true to a gospel of grace, is also most effective at expressing who we are. Propaganda turns people off; humbly admitting mistakes disarms.
You should never be ashamed to admit you have been wrong. It only proves you are wiser today than yesterday
Rather than admit a mistake, nations have gone to war, families have separated, and good people have sacrificed everything dear to them. Admitting that you were wrong is just another way of saying that you are wiser today than yesterday.
One cannot escape the feeling that these mathematical formulas have an independent existence and an intelligence of their own, that they are wiser than we are, wiser even than their discoverers.
There is a certain degree of satisfaction in having the courage to admit one's errors. It not only clears up the air of guilt and defensiveness, but often helps solve the problem created by the error
Each generation imagines itself to be more intelligent than the one that went before it, and wiser than the one that comes after it.
Those physical difficulties which you cannot account for, be very slow to arraign; for he that would be wiser than Nature would be wiser than God.
And here, poor fool, with all my lore I stand no wiser than before.
Now that I know that I am no wiser than anyone else, does this wisdom make me wiser?
Yet here I stand poor fool what more, not one wit wiser than before.
Satan is wiser now than before, and tempts by making rich instead of poor.
Remember you are a different person now than before, you are wiser & stronger for the trials that you have been through.
Beware of the man who works hard to learn something, learns it, and finds himself no wiser than before.
Ordinarily, the feds piggyback on the S.E.C. in complicated financial cases, but history proves that breath-holding on that score is a dangerous endeavor.
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