How do experience, knowledge, and sound judgment bring about wisdom? Are there classes in school that explain how to apply expertise, assessment, and learning and results in having insight? Is it just the lifelong attempt to find the answers that result in wisdom: if that is true, when you finally get it, is it too late to matter?
The answer to these questions requires us to think and ponder about what wisdom is. It is not the product of only schooling, just gaining knowledge, or the attempt to acquire it. The sincere attempt to reach it may be part of what wisdom is, but that effort is never completed.
Reading, classes, and study can bring about knowledge. Wisdom comes as we use what we have learned in gaining experience and trying to use what we have learned. A well-known quote,
“Nobody cares how much you know until they knowhow much you care”
implies that sincerity, when added to knowledge, is of more value. Gravity requires that we believe that the knowledge desired is of importance.
Wisdom is likely not a constant because our conclusions about our experiences change over time. Understanding is added to with changes in point of view.
When examined years later, the events of our own life can lead us to change our point of view and even reinvent ourselves. What wisdom is now likely will be different when looked back on.
The book of Proverbs has a lot to say about wisdom and knowledge. It suggests that they both come from God. This quote seems to sum it up very well:
Wisdom is the principal thing: therefore, get wisdom, and with all thy getting, get understanding. (Proverbs 4:7)