1. The nature, origins, and kinds of wisdom - μ§νμ λ³Έμ§, κΈ°μ λ° μ’ λ₯
a. Diverse conceptions of natural wisdom: the supreme form of human knowledge - μμ° μ§νμ λν λ€μν κ°λ : μΈκ° μ§μμ μ΅κ³ μ νν
b. The distinction between speculative and practical wisdom, or between philo- sophical and political wisdom - μ΄λ‘ μ μ§νμ μ€μ²μ μ§ν, λλ μ² νμ μ§νμ μ μΉμ μ§νμ ꡬλ³
c. Theological and mystical wisdom: the supernatural wisdom of faith and vision; the gift of wisdom - μ νμ λ° μ λΉμ μ§ν: μ μκ³Ό λΉμ μ μ΄μμ°μ μ§ν; μ§νμ μ λ¬Ό
d. The wisdom of God: the defect of human wisdom compared with divine wisdom; the folly or vanity of worldly wisdom - μ μ μ§ν: μ μ±ν μ§νμ λΉκ΅ν μΈκ° μ§νμ κ²°ν¨; μΈμμ μ§νμ μ΄λ¦¬μμ λλ νμ
2. Wisdom, virtue, and happiness - μ§ν, λ, κ·Έλ¦¬κ³ ν볡
a. Wisdom as an intellectual virtue: its relation to other intellectual virtues, espe- cially science and understanding; the vice or sin of folly - μ§νλ₯Ό μ§μ λμΌλ‘μ: λ€λ₯Έ μ§μ λ, νΉν κ³Όνκ³Ό μ΄ν΄μμ κ΄κ³; μ΄λ¦¬μμμ μ λ λλ μ£
b. Wisdom and manβs knowledge of good and evil: the relation of wisdom to the moral virtues - μ§νμ μΈκ°μ μ μ μΈμ: μ§νμ λλμ λκ³Όμ κ΄κ³
c. Wisdom as a good: its role in the happy life; the place of the wise man in society - μ μΌλ‘μμ μ§ν: ν볡ν μΆμμμ μν ; μ¬νμμ νμμ μμΉ
3. The love of wisdom and the steps to wisdom: the sophist, the philosopher, and the wise man - μ§νμ λν μ¬λκ³Ό μ§νλ‘ κ°λ λ¨κ³: μνΌμ€νΈ, μ² νμ, κ·Έλ¦¬κ³ νμ
4. The praise of folly: the wisdom of fools and innocents - μ΄λ¦¬μμμ λν μ°¬μ: λ°λ³΄μ μμν μλ€μ μ§ν
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