The Three Noble Cardinal Rules of Wisdom

The Three Noble Cardinal Rules of Wisdom

"There are three Rules of Wisdom. Three and only three. To these a sage is loyal, but forsaken by fools to be."

The journey to wisdom is the narrow path itself. But, in studying the framework, we might suggest the following three rules to provide us guidance.


1. Morality v. Wisdom. The interplay of the four Socratic Cardinal Virtues with the Christian Virtues is addressed in Hope, Prayer, Trust and Reliance Upon Luck; Or, the Ignoble Handouts Oft by Noble Emotions. [1]

At the point of perfection, Wisdom and Moral Goodness may be merged, but to suggest that condition as an existing (and not hopeful) natural tendency of humanity would be foolish. Accordingly, it is more empirically approachable to say that wisdom is the process, and moral goodness is a destination. [2] Wisdom is abstract and formulaically absolute, moral goodness is concrete and contextually relative.

Aesop teaches to be a "wise" person. Jesus teaches to be a "good" person. They are not the same thing.

We know the world is filled with foolish "do-gooders." As stated in the Epilogue:

Many books teach how to be a good person. Aesop teaches how to be a wise person. There is a difference.

[3, 3.1, 3.2] "Wisdom is the cause, and the 'good' is the effect. Wisdom effects good, good does not effect wisdom. Goodness forced upon wisdom is the grounding of foolishness itself, by definition...as: a 'do-gooder' fool and his money are soon parted." [*2]

The attempt to enslave wisdom to any external particular morality is error. Wisdom serves nothing but itself—as it must needs be—not even any morality. What is "good" is exactly what wisdom says it is, which is simply wisdom doing its job. Wisdom does what must be done, no more, no less. [4]

The sage freely controls opposite tools as may be required to achieve the primary objective. [*4, 5.1] As F. Scott Fitzgerald pointed out, "The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in mind at the same time and still retain the ability to function." Different tools for different uses. "Serpents and doves," shrewdly said Jesus. [*5.1, *4]


Indeed, Aesop teaches, over and over and over, that moral goodness can be gravely foolish. Wisdom compares and contrasts context for risk and practical probability relative to the primary objective. [6]

Aesop's morally good compassionate foolish woodsman risked his children to save a frozen serpent in Wisdom v. Compassion, Or, the Elizabeth Smart Prediction - No. 60. The Woodsman and Serpent. [7]

And Aesop taught again, by the inverse context, that it was the wise little lamb who refused the risk to help an injured wolf in Trust, by Tendency and Prediction. No. 36. The Wolf and the Sheep. [8]

[We note, incidentally, to keep our teachings straight, that Aesop's fable does not necessarily contradict the Jesusian parable in the "Good Samaritan." {5.2} In Aesop's fable, the lamb was wise by the practical risk presented by the injured wolf. The parable of Jesus was not teaching wisdom, per se, but rather condemning showy hypocritical self-righteous religious formality over substance. {*5.2, 5.3}]

In both of these timeless referenced fables, Aesop distinguishes moral goodness from practical wisdom. [*5.3, 5.4, 5.5] Wisdom listens, but only it rules.


2. Luck v. Wisdom. The condition of conflating luck with wisdom, using a hindsight judgment, is common enough. [*4] This condition is also addressed in many posts, and most focused as a discrete subject in On Wisdom and Luck; Or, Getting Lucky Is Not the Same as Being Wise. [9]

In short, a foolish decision that turns out well does not make it wise, and a wise decision that turns out badly does not make it foolish. [10, 11, 12] Wisdom is determined at the decision-point, using foresight. [*4]

Wisdom is a function of the future, and the future is unsure by its nature, so lucky or unlucky accidents can always occur. Bad bounces happen for wise play decisions, as well as good bounces for foolish play decisions. The sage is not undone by the accident of a freak gust of wind. [*3, 6] Indeed, the sage does not dwell in hope or regret, because the sage thought ahead and understands the nature of the decision, the risks, and the consequences. [*2, *3, *4]

Aesop's Crane put his neck down the throat of the Wolf with the trust and hope of a reward. The reward was life, snarled the Wolf after the fact. The Crane was lucky, not wise. [*10, *11] And, behold, sometimes throwing all to the wind for love will actually result in a happy ending, but that does not make it wise. Aesop's otherwise majestic Lion found this out too late, having lost his teeth, his claws, and his maiden. [*12] The fool must be lucky. Foolish, unlucky, Lion.


3. Time. Before we address Father Time, let us first reference his existential partner, Mother Nature.

Mother Nature is ever hovering—sometimes coddling and sometimes brutal—but bringing all by direct assault upon us. To some more and to some less.

As we are existentially naturally sentient beings, if she deprives us water, then we thirst for it, and if she grants fragrance, then we smell it. If she deprives us food, then we hunger for it, and if she gives beauty, then we see it. She can be managed by us, to a point, but she never lets us forget her, for both the sage and fool alike. Mother Nature makes us remember her with every breath we take.

But not so for Father Time. He does all, not by direct assault upon us, but rather by quiet siege. He surrounds us and deprives us slowly, giving us all the same amount of rope, choking us with our choices. Mother Nature has her moody impositions, but Father Time is moodless without ever imposing. He sits by patiently silently waiting, and he lets us forget about him. Unlike Mother Nature, Father Time cannot be managed, as such, but rather we must reconcile ourselves unto him by our choices.

And, in this fact of choice in reconciliation, the sage and the fool are not the same, for the sage always remembers Father Time, honoring him, and the fool tends to forget him. Fools waste time because fools do not remember time.

"This will end," says Father Time on the day we are born, giving us all the rope, and then he departs.

Therefore, what really separates the sage and the fool is decision-making with the appreciation of the end of self-time; that is, death. To the sage, death is the sine qua non boundary line that gives the circle its definition, so the sage talks of life and death as a single unitary concept. But, behold, the line that gives the circle its existential boundary does not give the circle its purpose.

No matter how financially wealthy or accomplished, the fool tends to be afraid of death, because the fool has not lived with wise purpose. And a life with the purpose of unlimited self-consumption, feeding only the self of sentient existence, is a wretched implosion of time and life that thereby fails wisely to live.

Death for a fool is death. Real death. Because the fool's life dies with the fool. [13] A fool's life marker is only by the last-ditch ancient dead tombstone. [14]

A sage dies, but the life of the sage lives, because the sage invested with time. The Buddha, Confucius, Gandhi, Jesus, Martin Luther King, Jr., Moses, Muhammed, Socrates, and so many others, many martyrs, peace and blessings be upon them all. [15]

Each life exceeded self; that is, exceeded the present.

A sage is harmonized and reconciled with Father Time, by definition. Death is not a contradiction to life for the sage. It cannot be. Life and death are one. Death for the sage is the unitary holistic released expressive perfection of life.

Therefore, the sage does not make decisions that satisfy only the space of a life-time, but the sage says to Father Time:

"Thank you for the opportunity. For this, I honor you by having tried my best to use my time to give back to you something to be received by many everlasting." Such as art, no life is perfected unto itself.* It must be received. [16]

And, to this, Father Time replies:

"You have not contradicted me, but rather, you have joined me." [5.6, 5.7]

Vanity draws all into self, and self draws all into one life. Vanity implodes upon death. But not for the sage.

Wisdom invests time into forever.** [17]


[1] Hope, Prayer, Trust and Reliance Upon Luck; Or, the Ignoble Handouts Oft by Noble Emotions [#GRZ_137]

[2] A Fool and His Country are Soon Parted; Or, The Late American Lifeboat Debate [#GRZ_171]

[3] Epilogue: On the Wisdom of Aesop [#GRZ_24]

[3.1] Reference - Epilogue: On the Wisdom of Aesop - Abridgment Series [#GRZ_86]

[3.2] The Essential Aesop LinkedIn Article Index [#GRZ_144]

[4] The Lincoln Leadership Dilemma; Or, The Primary Objective [#GRZ_176]

[5] The ONE LinkedIn Reference Set [#GRZ_183] 5.1 ONE: 963 [T10:16] ("Duality"); 5.2 ONE: 1040 [L10:27] ("Love Neighbor As Self"); 5.3 ONE 2211 [T23:25, L11:39] ("Inside-Out Hypocrisy-The Woes"); 5.4 ONE: 1020 [T11:18; L7:33] ("Wisdom Vindicated By Works"); 5.5 ONE: 949 [L14:28] ("Shrewd Planning"); 5.6 ONE: ...2368 [T25:25, L19:20] ("Profitable Servant"); 5.7 ONE: 1734 [L17:7] ("Exceed Expectation")

[6] A Bag of Talents, a Profitable Servant, and a Pile of Manure [#GRZ_173]

[7] Wisdom v. Compassion, Or, the Elizabeth Smart Prediction - No. 60. The Woodsman and Serpent - The Essential Aesop™ - Back to Basics Abridgment Series [#GRZ_98_60]

[8] Trust, by Tendency and Prediction. No. 36. The Wolf and the Sheep - The Essential Aesop™ - Back to Basics Abridgment Series [#GRZ_98_36]

[9] On Wisdom and Luck; Or, Getting Lucky Is Not the Same as Being Wise [#GRZ_155]

[10] Trusting the People, Trusting the Deal - The Business of Aesop™ No. 13 - The Wolf and the Crane [#GRZ_53]

[11] Bad Bargains, Power, and Vulnerability By Temptation - No. 13. The Wolf and the Crane - The Essential Aesop™ - Back to Basics Abridgment Series [#GRZ_98_13]

[12] The Folly of Love - No. 85. The Lion in Love - The Essential Aesop™-Back to Basics [#GRZ_98_85]

[13] The Scariest Sound in the World

[14] Death, and Final Disposition of the Once Primary Asset [#GRZ_129]

[15] People Pass

[16] Value Is As Value Does. No. 28. The Cock and the Jewel - The Essential Aesop™ - Back to Basics Abridgment Series [#GRZ_98_28]

[17] The Grain and the Grin


"Sapientia nihil servit nisi ipsa." ("Wisdom serves only itself"); "Sapiens casu non fit stultus." ("The sage is not undone by the accident."); "Fatuus felix debet obtinere." ("The fool needs to get lucky."); "Mater Naturam oppugnat, Patrem Tempus obsidet." ("Mother Nature attacks, Father Time besieges."); "Nulla vita in seipsa perficitur." ("No life is perfected unto itself."); "Nulla ars in seipsa perficitur." ("No art is perfected unto itself."); "Sapientia tempus collocat in aeternum." ("Wisdom invests time into forever.") ~ grz


The scariest sound in the world, with grave threat and grave claim.

Using no words, but suggesting guilt and shame.

Separating the fool from the sage, with a never-ending mock.

With each second of the clock...tick tock, tick tock, tick tock.

The Scariest Sound in the World [*13]


Gregg Zegarelli, Esq., earned both his Bachelor of Arts Degree and his Juris Doctorate from Duquesne University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. His dual major areas of study were History from the College of Liberal Arts and Accounting from the Business School (qualified to sit for the CPA examination), with dual minors in Philosophy and Political Science. He has enjoyed Adjunct Professorships in the Duquesne University Graduate Leadership Master Degree Program (The Leader as Entrepreneur; Developing Leadership Character Through Adversity) and the University of Pittsburgh Law School (The Anatomy of a Deal). He is admitted to various courts throughout the United States of America.

Gregg Zegarelli, Esq., is Managing Shareholder of Technology & Entrepreneurial Ventures Law Group, PC. Gregg is nationally rated as "superb" and has more than 35 years of experience working with entrepreneurs and companies of all sizes, including startups, INC. 500, and publicly traded companies. He is author of One: The Unified Gospel of Jesusand The Business of Aesop™ article series, and co-author with his father, Arnold Zegarelli, of The Essential Aesop: For Business, Managers, Writers and Professional SpeakersGregg is a frequent lecturer, speaker and faculty for a variety of educational and other institutions. 

© 2024 Gregg Zegarelli, Esq. Gregg can be contacted through LinkedIn.

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The LinkedIn Article Index [#GRZ_188]

#GreggZegarelli #Life #Death #Wisdom #MotherNature #Existentialism #Moses #Socrates #Jesus #Confucius #Muhammed #TheBuddha #Gandhi #MartinLutherKingJr #FatherTime #Zegarelli #GRZ_189

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Exited founder turned CEO-coach | Helping founders scale their companies without sacrificing themselves.

8mo

Interesting take on the Rules of Wisdom. Do you agree with them?

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