received wisdom Idioma
Experience is the father of wisdom.
Experience and knowledge result in better judgement.
conventional wisdom
conventional wisdom A widely held belief on which most people act. For example,
According to conventional wisdom, an incumbent nearly always wins more votes than a new candidate. This term was invented by John Kenneth Galbraith, who used it in
The Affluent Society (1958) to describe economic ideas that are familiar, predictable, and therefore accepted by the general public. Today it is used in any context where public opinion has considerable influence on the course of events.
wisdom tooth
wisdom tooth cut one's wisdom teeth to arrive at the age of discretion
the accustomed wisdom
Common ability that is captivated to be true, but may not be. The accustomed acumen says to augment a algid and abjure a fever, but that doesn't reflect accepted medical practice.Learn more: received, wisdomconventional/received ˈwisdom
the appearance or acceptance that best bodies have: Conventional acumen has it that riots alone anytime appear in big cities.The appellation accepted acumen was aboriginal acclimated by the economist John Kenneth Galbraith in his book The Affluent Society.Learn more: conventional, received, wisdom