No, but if you can't say definitively whether something is or is not wisdom, or any other quality you care to name, the word becomes nothing more than a vague description given to a not-necessarily-existent idea.
Like "cool," for instance. Are you cool? More importantly, does anyone care whether they're cool or not, seeing as we can't even agree on the exact nature of the trait? If you say, "you're pretty cool!" you're expressing some form of approval somehow, but for all the actual meaning conveyed you might as well have said, "you're pretty floggabooble!"
You see what I'm getting at? For practical purposes, if you cannot give a reasonably exact definition of a concept that concept might as well not exist. Which is why I say cynicism isn't wisdom. That in itself is not a definition of wisdom itself, any more than saying that "hungry" is not a verb is a definition of the word "hungry."
Like "cool," for instance. Are you cool? More importantly, does anyone care whether they're cool or not, seeing as we can't even agree on the exact nature of the trait? If you say, "you're pretty cool!" you're expressing some form of approval somehow, but for all the actual meaning conveyed you might as well have said, "you're pretty floggabooble!"
You see what I'm getting at? For practical purposes, if you cannot give a reasonably exact definition of a concept that concept might as well not exist. Which is why I say cynicism isn't wisdom. That in itself is not a definition of wisdom itself, any more than saying that "hungry" is not a verb is a definition of the word "hungry."
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