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The ability not only to read many books on different subject matters but to understand them and apply them when necessary is intelligence: Difference between revisions

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== Bhagavad-gita As It Is ==
<div class="section" id="Bhagavad-gita_As_It_Is" text="Bhagavad-gita As It Is"><h2>Bhagavad-gita As It Is</h2></div>


=== BG Chapters 7 - 12 ===
<div class="sub_section" id="BG_Chapters_7_-_12" text="BG Chapters 7 - 12"><h3>BG Chapters 7 - 12</h3></div>


<span class="q_heading">'''The ability not only to read many books on different subject matters but to understand them and apply them when necessary is intelligence (medhā), another opulence.'''</span>
<div class="quote" book="BG" link="BG 10.34" link_text="BG 10.34, Purport">
<div class="heading">The ability not only to read many books on different subject matters but to understand them and apply them when necessary is intelligence (medhā), another opulence.</div>


<span class="BG-statistics">'''[[Vanisource:BG 10.34|BG 10.34, Purport]]:''' The seven opulences listed—fame, fortune, fine speech, memory, intelligence, steadfastness and patience—are considered feminine. If a person possesses all of them or some of them he becomes glorious. If a man is famous as a righteous man, that makes him glorious. Sanskrit is a perfect language and is therefore very glorious. If after studying one can remember a subject matter, he is gifted with a good memory, or smṛti. And the ability not only to read many books on different subject matters but to understand them and apply them when necessary is intelligence (medhā), another opulence. The ability to overcome unsteadiness is called firmness or steadfastness (dhṛti). And when one is fully qualified yet is humble and gentle, and when one is able to keep his balance both in sorrow and in the ecstasy of joy, he has the opulence called patience (kṣamā).</span>
<div class="text">'''[[Vanisource:BG 10.34 (1972)|BG 10.34, Purport]]:''' The seven opulences listed—fame, fortune, fine speech, memory, intelligence, steadfastness and patience—are considered feminine. If a person possesses all of them or some of them he becomes glorious. If a man is famous as a righteous man, that makes him glorious. Sanskrit is a perfect language and is therefore very glorious. If after studying one can remember a subject matter, he is gifted with a good memory, or smṛti. And the ability not only to read many books on different subject matters but to understand them and apply them when necessary is intelligence (medhā), another opulence. The ability to overcome unsteadiness is called firmness or steadfastness (dhṛti). And when one is fully qualified yet is humble and gentle, and when one is able to keep his balance both in sorrow and in the ecstasy of joy, he has the opulence called patience (kṣamā).</div>
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Latest revision as of 03:02, 4 July 2022

Expressions researched:
"understand them and apply them when necessary is intelligence"

Bhagavad-gita As It Is

BG Chapters 7 - 12

The ability not only to read many books on different subject matters but to understand them and apply them when necessary is intelligence (medhā), another opulence.
BG 10.34, Purport: The seven opulences listed—fame, fortune, fine speech, memory, intelligence, steadfastness and patience—are considered feminine. If a person possesses all of them or some of them he becomes glorious. If a man is famous as a righteous man, that makes him glorious. Sanskrit is a perfect language and is therefore very glorious. If after studying one can remember a subject matter, he is gifted with a good memory, or smṛti. And the ability not only to read many books on different subject matters but to understand them and apply them when necessary is intelligence (medhā), another opulence. The ability to overcome unsteadiness is called firmness or steadfastness (dhṛti). And when one is fully qualified yet is humble and gentle, and when one is able to keep his balance both in sorrow and in the ecstasy of joy, he has the opulence called patience (kṣamā).