A Quote by George Bernard Shaw

Men are wise in proportion, not to their experience, but to their capacity for experience. — © George Bernard Shaw
Men are wise in proportion, not to their experience, but to their capacity for experience.
Young men are as apt to think themselves wise enough, as drunken men are to think themselves sober enough. They look upon spirit to be a much better thing than experience; which they call coldness. They are but half mistaken; for though spirit without experience is dangerous, experience without spirit is languid and ineffective.
None of us was born knowing or wise; but men become wise by consideration, observation, experience.
Hire and promote first on the basis of integrity; second, motivation; third, capacity; fourth, understanding; fifth, knowledge; and last and least, experience. Without integrity, motivation is dangerous; without motivation, capacity is impotent; without capacity, understanding is limited; without understanding, knowledge is meaningless; without knowledge, experience is blind. Experience is easy to provide and quickly put to good use by people with all the other qualities.
Experience can dull. With most men experience is a series of mistakes; the more experience you have the less you know.
He hazardeth much who depends for his learning on experience. An unhappy master, he that is only made wise by many shipwrecks; a miserable merchant, that is neither rich nor wise till he has been bankrupt. By experience we find out a short way by a long wandering.
Through the sacred art of pausing, we develop the capacity to stop hiding, to stop running away from our experience. We begin to trust in our natural intelligence, in our naturally wise heart, in our capacity to open to whatever arises.
Experience is the only prophecy of wise men.
A prudent person profits from personal experience, a wise one from the experience of others.
Poetry is innocent, not wise. It does not learn from experience, because each poetic experience is unique.
I cannot experience your experience. You cannot experience my experience. We are both invisible men.
We do not learn by experience, but by our capacity for experience.
The wise learn from the experience of others, and the creative know how to make a crumb of experience go a long way.
When we see that we are not made up by the other's experience, we then have the capacity not to take responsibility for what is now genuinely and for the first time not ours. And as a result, we can get just as close to the other's experience (even the other's experience of how dissapointing, enraging, or disapprovable we are!) without any need to react defensively to it or be guiltily compliant with it.
But it also became the experience, or was the experience, of the writers who were attracted to this kind of humor. They're all men or women who come from the same kind of experience in their own lives.
Experience makes more timid men than it does wise ones.
Wisdom: It's something that you know when you see it. You can recognize it, you can experience it. I have defined wisdom as the capacity to make judgments that when looked back upon will seem to have been wise.
This site uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience. More info...
Got it!