Examples of wisdom in the following topics:
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- Eliot makes a good point: it is difficult to maintain a healthy balance of information, knowledge, and wisdom.
- Wisdom, the most general category of all, refers to insight that is gained from knowledge.
- Wisdom includes truth, opinion, and perception.
- Balance information, knowledge, and wisdom as though you are building a house: lay a strong foundation of information, build knowledge on top of it, and finish the house with a roof of wisdom.
- Explain how information, knowledge, and wisdom work together in a speech
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- According to a Greek philosopher named Epictetus, "We have two ears and one mouth so that we can listen twice as much as we speak. " Epictetus's wisdom applies to public speaking: listening to the audience is twice as important as speaking to the audience.
- For an informative speech, provide a foundation of relevant information and then present knowledge and wisdom that will be useful to your audience.
- A commemorative speech usually compiles stories and wisdom that will help the audience honor, remember, or celebrate something.
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- In addition, Schwartz uses the testimony of these experts to show that they embody the characteristics of wisdom that Schwartz will describe in the remainder of the speech.
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- Analyzing or breaking apart such expressions adds complexity to communications, and questions received wisdom.
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- Winston Churchill's maxim, "The farther backward you can look, the farther forward you are likely to see," is a great case for the relationship between context and wisdom.
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- You see your audience waiting to receive your wisdom.
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- Speaking well, also means speaking justly, where eloquence, wisdom and goodness combine.