“We make men without chests and expect of them virtue and enterprise.”
C.S. Lewis wrote these words in 1943 warning us of one of civilization’s greatest flaws. Lewis believed that the education system was producing knowledgeable individuals but neglected to cultivate wise ones. Students were taught to think critically about everything but themselves: they developed intellect, but not character. And so Lewis identifies this quality by calling them “men without chests”—people whose minds were developed, but whose morals and virtues had taken a backseat.
Today, more than eighty years later, this warning remains just as relevant.
Our present-day society has access to more information than ever before. We can instantly look up the answers to nearly every question, watch lectures from across the world, and learn more facts in a single afternoon than previous generations might have been able to do in months. Yet despite this abundance of knowledge, our society remains in a polarized state: discourse has become increasingly hostile, purpose feels elusive, and trust in institutions is waning.
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Many could point to various reasons as to why this is the case, but like Lewis, I’d argue the problem is simply that we have mistaken information—knowledge—for wisdom. True wisdom, as Lewis argued, requires an alignment with the “Tao”—the external, objective reality of universal moral law. While knowledge is the accumulation of facts in the “head,” wisdom is the application of such facts in the “chest” that aid in loving what is objectively good and rejecting what is bad. Knowledge tells us what can be done, while wisdom asks us whether it should be done.
A society can possess an extraordinary amount of knowledge and still lack wisdom. History provides countless examples, of which includes Nazi Germany. Hitler and his regime demonstrated a profound understanding of power, persuasion, and psychology. He knew how to manipulate an entire nation, how to mobilize fear, and how to surround himself with individuals whose skills became his greatest assets. Yet what he lacked was a chest. He lacked wisdom, morals, and the recognition of objective good. This tragedy perfectly elucidates why intelligence alone, by default, cannot guarantee good judgment and why knowledge, itself, will never produce virtue.
Lewis feared an education system that prioritized technical skills over the formation of character. He worried students would learn to analyze arguments without learning how to pursue truth, how to acquire power without learning how to use it responsibly.
Now, we are living in an age where information may be constant, but reflection still rare. We are encouraged to react instantly on social media, to form opinions with peer bias, and define ourselves by what we consume rather than what we understand. Ideas are treated like sides to take, as though some form of a popularity contest.
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In an environment such as this, it is awfully easier to be informed than it is to be wise.
Wisdom, as it always has, requires humility—the recognition that just because we can look something up does not equate to having an answer. It requires patience—the willingness to think before we speak. And most of all, it requires character—the ability to hold fast to what is true even when inconvenient.
Lewis’s concern was not only about education but about human formation… about what kind of people we become when knowledge overcomes judgement. We continue to build minds without asking whether we are also building chests. For what good is knowledge if it produces a capable mind but an empty heart? And what good is information if we lack the wisdom to understand it?
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