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Simple-Minded Wisdom
- 222 statements
- 41 feature instances
- 41 referencing feature instances
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A "simple" character (particularly a servant or rural character) displays uncommon wisdom — usually much to the surprise of an arrogant main character. Creates An Aesop moment. This would seem to derive from Cervantes' Don Quixote, where the archetypically "simple" Sancho Panza occasionally produces statements of great wisdom (although in that case the main character, Don Quixote, often fails to notice or credit that wisdom). Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_1'); })Dungeons & Dragons players will lecture, in great detail, that Wisdom and Intelligence are not the same thing. Compare Dumbass Has a Point, which is what said Insufferable Genius may say after hearing the simple character's idea, and Eccentric Mentor, when the character is not simple, but just extremely quirky. See also: Achievements in Ignorance, Too Dumb to Fool, Whoopi Epiphany Speech, Infallible Babble, Hanlon's Razor, Wisdom from the Gutter. Contrast Ditzy Genius, which is in many ways the diametric opposite of this trope, and Seemingly Profound Fool, in which other characters erroneously read wisdom into the genuinely banal observations of a bona fide fool. |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_1b7f85df | type |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_1b7f85df | comment |
Misaki Yata from K has moments of this. Particularly, late in season 2, to Saruhiko: "You're not a traitor! If you'd go this far for him, the Blue King was your King all along!" Saruhiko lampshades this when he's thinking about it just after Misaki leaves. | |
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Sheriff Carter, from Eureka. It's the whole point of having him as the sheriff in a town of full geniuses with too much brains and not enough sense. | |
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Solomon Grundy from Justice League is a zombie with the mind of a small child. Yet when set across from Lex Luthor, it's clear that he has more common sense than the World's Smartest Man, disdaining Lex' Complexity Addiction in favor of simply smashing through problems - which usually works to his favor. | |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_39fe00f1 | type |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_39fe00f1 | comment |
Sera from Dragon Age: Inquisition occasionally makes surprisingly profound statements based on straightforward observations, stumping even the more book-smart party members. For example, when Solas badgers her one conversation too many about organizing the Red Jennies to dispose of the nobility for good: This exchange becomes even more tragic in hindsight after you learn Solas's backstory; it turns out that his actions against the elven "gods" in the distant past resulted in pretty much this. |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_468bebb0 | type |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_468bebb0 | comment |
Discworld: Witches sometimes provide this, since they're often quite intelligent about human nature while not being very well-educated. Sometimes, they even do it to other witches. In Wyrd Sisters, after an attempt at some complicated mental magic by Granny Weatherwax fails to work on the Duchess, Nanny Ogg deals with her by hitting her over the head with a cauldron so the guards can arrest her. Maskerade has an example from someone who's not a witch; Walter Plinge is asked "if your house was on fire what would you take out?" and answers "The fire!" This is one of Captain Carrot's defining traits. At the start of the Watch sequence, he really is naive to the ways of the city, arresting the head of the thieves' guild for thievery and not recognizing that his boarding house is actually a brothel, but he also takes literally Vimes' order to "throw the book at [Wonse]", while Wonse is at the edge of a three-story drop. As the books progress he wises up, but continues to act in a very simple matter. To free a golem, he puts its receipt of sale in its head, to stop a war, he suggests arresting the armies for breach of the peace. And it all works. |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_4e45b093 | type |
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Much of the humor of The Big Bang Theory stems from this trope. Sheldon, Leonard, Howard, and Raj are all geniuses in various scientific fields and uber-nerds, but they lack social skills and awareness of anything outside their spheres (Sheldon, for instance, has no idea who Radiohead is), and generally get so caught up in their own projects and brains that they run into countless issues. In contrast is Penny, Sheldon and Leonard's extremely attractive neighbor and a waitress/would-be actress who didn't even finish community college in Nebraska—but what she lacks in formal education, she more than makes up for in wit and practical knowledge. In one instance, she is able to recover all of Sheldon's hacked World of Warcraft items by kicking the guy who stole it in the crotch (after the guys failed to do so using nerdy threats); in another, the guys turn to her when they need some help learning how to fish. The later seasons play this up even further with Amy Farrah Fowler, who starts out as a female version of Sheldon. She and Penny are polar opposites in every way, but the two gradually become best friends, with Penny's "girly" personality and more traditionally feminine wisdom contrasting with Amy's dour demeanor and purely cerebral worldview (the latter has to look up how to have a slumber party, for instance). In just one example, Amy doesn't know how to settle an argument she's having with Sheldon, so Penny teaches her the valuable art of making a scene in public (which she's apparently mastered to the point of being banned from three separate Chili's restaurants). Even Sheldon and Leonard's mothers get in on this trope. Beverly Hofsteader, Leonard's mother, is a genius sociologist/anthropologist, as well as an extremely frigid person who's almost robotic in her complete lack of affection for anyone and anything (her advice to Leonard when he's going through a tough time? Telling him to "buck up, sissypants" and buy her books on Amazon). Sheldon's mother Mary, by contrast, is a sweet-natured and cheerfully bigoted Baptist Christian from the "Bible Belt" of Texas, and rarely understands anything her son and his friends are doing. Needless to say, Mary is far more adept at solving problems than Beverly; for starters, she actually considers other people as human beings rather than test subjects. Mary has this relationship with Sheldon, too. Her son may be a genius, but Mrs. Cooper is able to easily sort out Sheldon's overthinking, neurotic behavior with some plain wisdom and occasional trickery. In one instance, Sheldon and Amy break up, prompting the former to adopt dozens of cats to make up for the void, all while denying any problem. Mary comes at Leonard's request and, after assessing the situation, invites Amy for dinner, then tells the pair that it's a good thing they've separated, as they're clearly a terrible match for each other. A stunned Sheldon disagrees and promptly makes up with Amy to prove Mary wrong—which is naturally just what she expected her son to do. |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_526d4c5c | comment |
In the first Knights of the Old Republic, you get questions to see what kind of Jedi you'll be. None are "wrong", but guess which answer here leads you to become the wisdom-seeking, magelike Jedi Consular: | |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_606ebe36 | comment |
In Erasmus Montanus, Erasmus' brother Jacob strikes a balance between Erasmus' Insufferable Genius, and the townsfolk's Working-Class People Are Morons by maybe not having the fancy oratory skill or education of his brother, but being clever enough to recognize when you should stick to your principle and when you should go with the flow. | |
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Zombie Land Saga: The protagonists, an Idol Singer group secretly made of Friendly Zombies, get deep in debt after a failed concert in a large venue. Their manager Kotaro, who has also been the one doing the makeup work that allowed them to leave their mansion while being able to pass for live humans, gets too busy drowning his sorrows to take care of that task. Soon, the girls, minus the member who failed to recover her full mental capabilities upon revival, are having a meeting to address the growing debt, their lack of money and their depleted food supply. During the discussion, Tae, the aforementioned member with limited mental capabilities, comes in wearing Uncanny Valley Makeup, turning out to have gone shopping after stealing Kotaro's savings. This allows the others to realize they can do each other's makeup and find jobs. | |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_6ac55ec7 | type |
Simple-Minded Wisdom | |
Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_6ac55ec7 | comment |
As mentioned above, Dungeons & Dragons can invoke this when a character with low Intelligence has a high Wisdom score. The closest analogue for these stats are IQ vs. EQ, with Intelligence representing things like knowledge, education, and problem-solving while Wisdom is more about empathy, introspection, and the ability to read motivations in others. | |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_70814599 | type |
Simple-Minded Wisdom | |
Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_70814599 | comment |
Jack O'Neill of Stargate SG-1 often falls into this. Although he's also smarter than he lets it show. | |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom | |
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Pinky, from Pinky and the Brain, on those rare times when he is pondering what Brain is pondering. | |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_7de1376e | type |
Simple-Minded Wisdom | |
Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_7de1376e | comment |
Witches sometimes provide this, since they're often quite intelligent about human nature while not being very well-educated. Sometimes, they even do it to other witches. In Wyrd Sisters, after an attempt at some complicated mental magic by Granny Weatherwax fails to work on the Duchess, Nanny Ogg deals with her by hitting her over the head with a cauldron so the guards can arrest her. Maskerade has an example from someone who's not a witch; Walter Plinge is asked "if your house was on fire what would you take out?" and answers "The fire!" | |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom | |
Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_7e9d1a6c | comment |
In Frozen, the child-like living snowman Olaf is surprisingly insightful about the nature of love, despite only having been "alive" for a day or two, and gives Anna some advice on the subject. | |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom | |
Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_7fc78282 | comment |
Samwise Gamgee of The Lord of the Rings has plain good hobbit-sense, even more than the other three hobbits because he's a simple gardener and not in the gentry. When forced to carry the Ring himself for a time, it naturally tempts him and chooses to do so with visions of Mordor as a beautiful garden. Sam considers it and then shakes his head because he could never manage a garden that vast on his own. And when the Ring tries to tempt him with the idea of having hordes of servants to manage the garden for him, Sam shrugs that off because if other people are doing the actual gardening, then it wouldn't be his garden. This trope shows up in The Hobbit as well. Thorin Oakenshield remarks that Bilbo has "some wisdom and some courage, in equal measure." Thorin goes on to say this about hobbits and their Arcadian lifestyle as a whole, remarking that "if more of us valued food and cheer and song over hoarded gold, this world would be a merrier place." |
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The Scarecrow from The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, both the book and movie. He wishes for a brain, yet neither he nor anyone else he's traveling with notices the discrepancy. | |
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Lily from Daughter for Dessert says a lot of things that seem like profound revelations on the importance of relaxation, but a closer inspection reveals that they are predicated on a lack of or aversion to responsibilities. | |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom | |
Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_8a479817 | comment |
In The Story of Valentine and His Brother, the vagabond Myra is almost completely uneducated in every subject, including religion, but she has a much greater sense of the presence of God than most other people. | |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom | |
Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_94bfa327 | comment |
Nug of the Urpney squad in The Dreamstone. He's rather vacuous, but he usually can point out the simplest (and often correct) solution to problems, which Blob usually steals credit for. He also has a slightly more unnerving savviness for potential morbid fates they can suffer. | |
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In Alexander Pope's The Rape of the Lock, right before the incredibly epic battle over an involuntary haircut, Clarissa, probably a lower-status lady than most of the players, rebukes everyone on how it's silly to waste energy over such a trivial matter, and how good humor is a better tool than beauty or tantrums to weather the storms of life. Of course, no one listens to her. | |
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The West Wing features a downplayed example with Donna Moss, Josh's assistant. She's quite intelligent and not "simple" at all, but she's also extremely new to the world of government as opposed to the rest of the main cast, who are longtime political players. As such, she often ends up asking questions about particular procedures or policies in the White House (which in turn helps the audience make sense of them, too). However, Donna's non-political perspective often allows her to see things more clearly than her colleagues, who can get too caught up in their own agendas to see easier solutions or the views of the people they supposedly represent. For instance, in "20 Hours in America," Donna, Josh, and Toby miss their flight back to D.C. and have to travel across the Midwest via trains and cars; along the way, they meet various individuals who are being affected by the White House's policies. Donna is the only one who actually listens to what those people are saying and the problems they've faced, whereas Josh and Toby are too busy arguing about the "big picture" and abstract theory to notice. Toward the end of the episode, she calls the guys out for their insensitivity, and they take the lessons to heart, as shown when Toby sits down for a drink with a local man and has a genuinely compassionate chat about the difficulties he and his children are having. Donna was also able to occasionally come up with simple solutions to knotty political problems by pointing out easy but overlooked tactics. In "The Stackhouse Filibuster," for example, she finds a way to help the titular Senator continue his speech by pointing out the rule that he's able to take questions as part of the filibuster, and further that there's nothing that states how long those questions need to be. Sure enough, the White House staff is able to get other Democratic Senators to ask Stackhouse twenty-plus part questions, saving the day. |
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In Twisted Toyfare Theatre, Mego Spider-Man seems to totally lack his signature super-powers, but also happens to be the only person in Megoville apart from maybe Dr. Doom who has a single lick of common sense. | |
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Twisted Metal: Head-On has Cousin Eddy, a mentally deficient hillbilly, winning the Twisted Metal tournament. Typically, this is where Jackass Genie Calypso would grant a wish that he would horribly corrupt in various ways. Cousin Eddy points at his vehicle, and simply asks Calypso to "make it better". Calypso initially refuses to grant Eddy's wish due to Eddy not having been invited to the tournament, but Eddy "persuades" Calypso by threatening to break his neck. Despite the higher-than-usual motivation Calypso had to be a Jackass Genie, there's not a lot of alternate interpretations for "make it better", and he just grant Eddy's wish without his usual dickery. | |
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Cyril The Zombie proved himself to be one in Wreck-It Ralph. | |
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Darwin of The Amazing World of Gumball, though still very dippy, sometimes shows more awareness and concern of the dumb antics he and his brother Gumball get caught into. On rarer occasions Gumball himself can apply. | |
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Edith Bunker, of All in the Family, might be the patron saint of this trope. She lived with her blue-collar, bigoted husband Archie, feminist daughter Gloria, and liberal, atheist son-in-law Mike, and often seemed uninformed or unaware of the major political and sociocultural debates that the other three had. However, Edith was often the only person who was able to apply practical, plain-spoken solutions to issues, whether it was solving a riddle about a female doctor, not allowing racism to tint her opinions while she served on a jury, or defusing a potentially catastrophic argument by rhapsodizing about maple syrup. She also embodied the principles of kindness and embracing those different from her (without being condescending, as Mike tended to do) that the rest of her family could get too caught up arguing about to practice. For example, Edith happily called the African-American Louise Jefferson her best friend while their respective husbands refused to even speak to each other, "adopted" the gay drag performer Beverly Leslie as a member of her family, and immediately accepted her lesbian cousin Liz's longtime relationship with her "roommate" Veronica as completely legitimate. It's not for nothing that critics considered Edith, who spoke plainly but wisely, the "anti-Richard Nixon," who was very intelligent but widely perceived to lack honesty and common sense. | |
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Okuyasu Nijimura from JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Diamond is Unbreakable is often like this. For example, he convinces himself that Yoshihiro Kira, the ghost Stand user, doesn't actually need to breathe because if he did, in his words, "all the dead people would suck up the air and we'd all suffocate". Even though he's technically correct, he still sounds like he's got rocks in his head. | |
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Critical Role: Caduceus Clay has the highest Wisdom and lowest Intelligence scores of the Mighty Nein; he makes no attempts to hide his ignorance about many aspects of the wider world, having never left his home outside the village of Shadycreek Run before the Nein stumbled into his life, but he has an ability to see through to the hearts of people, comprehending their motives and true feelings that borders on the supernatural. | |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom | |
Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_bc848d30 | comment |
Patrick Star from SpongeBob SquarePants. Became less common when Flanderization kicked in, though he still has his moments. | |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_bd4ba20f | type |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_bd4ba20f | comment |
In BlazBlue: Central Fiction, Izanami manipulates much of the cast by dangling the power to literally create their ideal world in front of them, then explaining that the only way that power would work is if they kill the main heroine. Taokaka, despite her three-second attention span and her nature as a constant source of comic relief, is the only member of the cast not only to realise that she actually has everything she needs to be happy already, but that she would rather live in something genuine rather than in a custom-tailored world that couldn't possibly be anything else. | |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_bd91db47 | type |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_bd91db47 | comment |
In Pokémon Journeys: The Series, Ash's primary distinction from Goh is that he's Book Dumb and doesn't know how to use words good, but he still manages to teach Goh things the book-smart boy wouldn't understand otherwise, because he has more life experience. | |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_c00034c2 | type |
Simple-Minded Wisdom | |
Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_c00034c2 | comment |
In Beetle Bailey, Zero the resident ditz becomes inspired by Plato to write his own version of Plato's philosophical graffiti. On the graffiti wall, Zero lists such simple pleasures and acts of kindness, which include "Pet a dog, plant a flower, smile at the bus driver, smile at a stranger, go barefoot, pick up someone else's litter, look for funny shapes in the clouds, visit an old person, stop an argument, warm a heart, call up an old friend, wash a window, take an ordinary object and find beauty in it, show a child how to whistle, think of three good things that happened to you yesterday, forgive a mistake, do what someone else wants to do, be patient, put yourself in someone else's place, say 'Thank you' with meaning, look for truth, inspire someone, lower your voice, make time for a young person, let your kindness come out, erase worry and fear of the unknown, have some fun." Beetle and Plato are so overwhelmed by the simplicity and profoundness of Zero's musings that they serve Zero breakfast in bed the next morning. | |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_c2463c53 | type |
Simple-Minded Wisdom | |
Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_c2463c53 | comment |
Final Fantasy V's protagonist, Bartz, is described in the manual as a "simple wanderer." He has some Book Dumb traits, but he also has a very uncomplicated and un-angsty outlook on saving the world. For instance, when Krile's wind drake will die if not treated with a plant that only grows in a place so dangerous no one has ever returned from it, it sends the party into a brief despair, until Bartz breaks it with these words: | |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_c511c682 | type |
Simple-Minded Wisdom | |
Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_c511c682 | comment |
Obelix in Asterix. He's a bit socially awkward and only seems to have a vague idea what's going on most of the time, but because of this is able to see contradictions and strangeness in cultural behavior everyone else sees as being normal. His Catchphrase — "these Romans are crazy" — represents this about half of the time (the other half of the time, he is just mistaken about what the Romans are thinking). | |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_cae652c | type |
Simple-Minded Wisdom | |
Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_cae652c | comment |
Gon Freeccs in Hunter × Hunter is surprisingly insightful for a naive kid, which saves him and his friend's lives many times as he's good at thinking outside the box. For example, he figures out there must be a loophole in Kurapika's Judgement Chain if Kurapika was able to put a chain in his own heart. He also suggests offering their services to the one who bought the Greed Island game rather than attempt to raise billions of money within 2 days, which Killua never even thought of and even remarks it has a higher chance of success. | |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_d4efb984 | type |
Simple-Minded Wisdom | |
Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_d4efb984 | comment |
The Golden Girls often did this with both Rose and Sophia. Rose's common sense usually helped her play peacemaker between Dorothy and Blanche (whose polar opposite personalities could lead to trouble) and perceive other people's lies. Sophia, meanwhile, was unafraid to frankly state what was going on rather than being tactful; while this occasionally rubbed people the wrong way, her approach was far more effective than any Zany Scheme the others cooked up. | |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_d9c602eb | type |
Simple-Minded Wisdom | |
Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_d9c602eb | comment |
Stan Marsh from South Park, although he's not an idiot like most examples. Butters Stotch is a straighter example in recent episodes. |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_e081af79 | type |
Simple-Minded Wisdom | |
Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_e081af79 | comment |
In The Inexplicable Adventures of Bob!, this is very nearly Bob's most prominent personality trait. | |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_f3e1f424 | type |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_f3e1f424 | comment |
Merlin from Merlin is a subversion. Everyone thinks this of him, but he's actually The Smart Guy. | |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_f3e1f424 | |
Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_f4b0cbe2 | type |
Simple-Minded Wisdom | |
Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_f4b0cbe2 | comment |
Horace Altman of Ranger's Apprentice has a fair bit of this. While not a Guile Hero or The Strategist like his Ranger friends, he's intelligent and sensible in his own way, and methodically thinks through problems while Will jumps from one idea to another. | |
Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_f4b0cbe2 | featureApplicability |
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Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_fd0b756 | type |
Simple-Minded Wisdom | |
Simple-Minded Wisdom / int_fd0b756 | comment |
This trope shows up in The Hobbit as well. Thorin Oakenshield remarks that Bilbo has "some wisdom and some courage, in equal measure." Thorin goes on to say this about hobbits and their Arcadian lifestyle as a whole, remarking that "if more of us valued food and cheer and song over hoarded gold, this world would be a merrier place." | |
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