The Relative Value of Wisdom

12 Then I turned to consider wisdom,(A) madness, and folly, for what will the king’s successor[a] be like? He[b] will do what has already been done.(B) 13 And I realized that there is an advantage to wisdom over folly, like the advantage of light over darkness.(C)

14 The wise person has eyes in his head,
but the fool walks in darkness.(D)

Yet I also knew that one fate comes to them both.(E) 15 So I said to myself, “What happens to the fool will also happen to me. Why then have I been overly wise?” (F) And I said to myself that this is also futile. 16 For, just like the fool, there is no lasting remembrance of the wise,(G) since in the days to come both will be forgotten. How is it that the wise person dies just like the fool?

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Footnotes

  1. 2:12 Lit the man who comes after the king
  2. 2:12 Some Hb mss read They

12 My reflections then turned to wisdom, madness, and folly. What can the king’s heir do but what has already been done? 13 I saw that wisdom is more beneficial than folly, as light is more beneficial than darkness.

14 The wise have eyes in their head,
    but fools walk around in darkness.

But I also realized that the same fate happens to both of them. 15 So I thought to myself, What happens to the fool will also happen to me. So why have I been so very wise? I said to myself, This too is pointless. 16 There is no eternal memory of the wise any more than the foolish,[a] because everyone is forgotten before long. How can the wise die just like the fool?

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Footnotes

  1. Ecclesiastes 2:16 Or The wise and the foolish alike are never remembered.