A Quote by Rashi

The fool who traveled is better off than the wise man who stayed home. — © Rashi
The fool who traveled is better off than the wise man who stayed home.
The fool who recognizes his foolishness, is a wise man. But the fool who believes himself a wise man, he really is a fool.
A fool who recognises his own ignorance is thereby in fact a wise man, but a fool who considers himself wise - that is what one really calls a fool.
The only real difference between a wise man and a fool, Moore knew, was that the wise man tended to make more serious mistakes—and only because no one trusted a fool with really crucial decisions; only the wise had the opportunity to lose battles, or nations.
There is no greater fool than the man who thinks himself wise; no one is wiser than he who suspects he is a fool.
Better be an old maid, a woman with herself as a husband, than the wife of a fool; and Solomon more than hints that all men are fools; and every wise man knows himself to be one.
The fool doth think he is wise, but the wise man knows himself a fool.
It is not fit that every man should travel; it makes a wise man better, and a fool worse.
But for the wise, it says in the Bible: when a wise man hears wisdom, he reacts. When a fool hears it, his acts are folly. If you wanna be a fool, help yourself, it's not my problem.
A wise man may be duped as well as a fool; but the fool publishes the triumph of his deceiver; the wise man is silent, and denies that triumph to an enemy which he would hardly concede to a friend; a triumph that proclaims his own defeat.
Travel makes a wise man better, and a fool worse.
The errors of a wise man are literally more instructive than the truths of a fool. The wise man travels in lofty, far-seeing regions; the fool in low-lying, high-fenced lanes; retracing the footsteps of the former, to discover where he diviated, whole provinces of the universe are laid open to us; in the path of the latter, granting even that he has not deviated at all, little is laid open to us but two wheel-ruts and two hedges.
Wine turns the wise man into a fool and the fool into a wise man.
A wise man can learn more from a foolish question than a fool can learn from a wise answer.
The misfortune of the wise is better than the prosperity of the fool.
Crying with the wise is better than laughing with the fool.
The fool who thinks he is wise is just a fool. The fool who knows he is a fool is wise indeed.
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