Since that quote has been attributed on the internet to James Madison on a lot of websites, I expect it means that people can write whatever they want on the Internet, claim that somebody famous wrote it, and then countless people will believe that attribution and copy it on their own websites and Facebook pages, even though it's almost always a spurious quotation.
Philosopher and philosophize are two words with "philosophy" as a base word.
Philosophy is more than literature. We can have philosophy written in define beautiful language, but literature may not have words of wisdom which needed to be defined as "philosophy in life" Angela Lee
Philosophy comes from the words philo=love and sophia=knowledge/wisdom. Philosophy tries to solve the problems that aren't tangible. Like existence, knowledge, metaphysics etc. The philosophy of man is philosophy that focuses on man and its problems. For example government, schooling and law.
Philosophy can be defined as the love of knowledge or wisdom. The word Philosophy is greek and consists of the words 'philo' and 'Sophia'.Philo means "loving", Sophia means "knowledge or wisdom"
the love of wisdom
Common sense should tell you that common sense is not a word, it is a phrase made from two words.
speak from your heart. If you quote others, he/she will sense it and will regard you as a fake.
The anagram is "common scents" (wordplay on common sense).
The answer is Common Sense
"Actions speak louder than words" is a common sense saying which means that what you do carries more weight and impact than what you say.
"Rule Of Thumb" "Common Sense Guess"
A lot..... But if its about their job please use common sense
Someone with common sense.
Some transition words to introduce a quote include "according to," "as stated by," "in the words of," and "to quote."
Philosopher and philosophize are two words with "philosophy" as a base word.
Some words with the prefix "phil" are philosophy, philanthropy, and philharmonic.
Common sense isn't always a result of a non-intelligent analysis - presumption and arrogance leads us to think that. Intelligence shows itself by discerning what's acceptable and getting new, logical, provable solutions whenever common sense fails. So, answering your question: common sense tickles the exceptionally intelligent brain, and this one answers the provocation (=accepts the challenge) by reflecting. In other words, common sense gives a lot of inputs. The non arrogant one might even conclude that common sense had... a sense, after all. ;)