“The philosopher and the poet are ‘unbourgeois’ in so far as they preserve a deep and strong sense of wonder, and this fact naturally exposes them to the danger of losing their foot-hold in the everyday world. Indeed it might almost be said that ‘to be a stranger in the world’ is their occupational disease (though of course there could no more be a professional philosopher than there could be a professional poet–for as we said, man cannot live permanently at such heights). Wonder, however, does not make a man ‘able’–it means, after all, to be profoundly moved and ‘shaken.’ And those who undertake to live under the sign and constellation ‘wonder’ (why is there such a thing as being?) must certainly be prepared to find themselves lost, at times, in the ordinary workaday world. The man to whom everything is an occasion of wonder will sometimes simply forget to use these things in a workaday way.”
Josef Pieper, Leisure, the Basis of Culture