Acharya Prashant clarifies the statement, "Knowledge and wisdom do not go together." He explains that this does not mean they are mutually exclusive or enemies, where the presence of one would negate the other. Such an interpretation would be a great misconception. The statement is not meant to imply that a wise person lacks knowledge or that knowledge disappears in the presence of wisdom. The true meaning of the statement is that knowledge and wisdom are incomparable, not incompatible. They belong to entirely different dimensions and thus cannot be measured against each other. The speaker uses several analogies to illustrate this point: just as one cannot compare smell with weight, temperature with density, or the x-axis with the y-axis, one cannot compare knowledge with wisdom. They are fundamentally different. Knowledge belongs to the dimension of form, shape, the world, and mental activity. It is a process of accumulation, of gathering information. In contrast, wisdom is the very dimension from which the mind itself arises. Wisdom is not about collecting something new but is the revelation of that which is already known, the unveiling of what already is. Wisdom comes with the maturity of self-learning. The art of living, therefore, is for the mind to function in knowledge while being immersed in wisdom. The mind should use knowledge but remain firmly established in understanding (Bodh). This means one should live in the world of knowledge but be rooted in the silence of understanding. The mind should use words, but remain established in silence.