Common sense

What is common sense (with examples)

As common sense it is called set of knowledge, beliefs and explanations, based on personal experience or popular wisdom, that are shared by a community (family, town, nation), and that are considered prudent, sensible, logical and valid.

Common sense is based on the idea that There are a series of principles, values, thoughts and behaviors that are shared by the entire society and, consequently, common to all. It is made up of reasonable judgments or practical conclusions, without complications, that allow us to give meaning or logic to any event or fact in our daily lives.

As such, it arises spontaneously in our daily lives, either from personal experiences or from shared experiences. Likewise, it is also transmitted from generation to generation in the form of principles and values, traditions and beliefs, maxims and sayings.

Common sense includes written and unwritten rules. It allows us to handle ourselves in the most varied situations with prudence and good sense. It helps us know what is most appropriate to say or do in certain situations. Hence, it is not an individual thought that depends on each person, but, on the contrary, a kind of collective thought, however, it can vary from culture to culture.

By common sense many things are done or not done.

For example:

out of common sense one gives condolences to someone who has recently lost a family member; out of common sense one avoids walking at night through the most dangerous places in a city; out of common sense we dress warmly if it’s cold or avoid getting wet if it rains; out of common sense We greeted when we arrived and said goodbye when we left, because not doing so could be misinterpreted, among many other things.

See also: good sense.