Every scholar, I presume, is not, necessarily, a man of sense.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
A scholar is like a book written in a dead language. It is not every one that can read in it.
A man may be as much a fool from the want of sensibility as the want of sense.
The world's great men have not commonly been great scholars, nor its great scholars great men.
No man is the wiser for his learning; it may administer matter to work in, or objects to work upon; but wit and wisdom are born with a man.
Every intelligent person, whether he's an artist or not - a mathematician, a doctor, a scientist - possesses a poetic way of seeing and describing the world.
No man likes to have his intelligence or good faith questioned, especially if he has doubts about it himself.
Only as an individual can man become a philosopher.
If a man has common sense, he has all the sense there is.
I am very sure that any man of common understanding may, by culture, care, attention, and labor, make himself what- ever he pleases, except a great poet.
Man is a spiritual intelligence, who has taken flesh with the object of gaining experience in worlds below the spiritual, in order that he may be able to master and to rule them, and in later ages take his place in the creative and directing hierarchies of the universe.