The sage writer makes non-logical arguments about contemporary social issues, drawing from various forms of modern knowledge and traditional wisdom. Sage writing can be distinguished from traditional wisdom literature in that "Whereas the pronouncements of traditional wisdom literature always take as their point of departure the assumption that they embody the accepted, received wisdom of an entire society, the pronouncements of the biblical prophet and Victorian sage begin with the assumption that, however traditional their messages may once have been, they are now forgotten or actively opposed by society."[1] The sage borrows from the Old Testamentprophets what George Landow identifies as a four part strategy of "interpretation, attack upon the audience (or those in authority), warning, and visionary promise."[2]