I think most of what you have typed here is wrong. Especially your summary sentance in bold.
There is no such thing as infinite wisdom. Even suggesting that there is a way to aquire infinite wisdom show how unwise one is.
You appear to have nothing to offer on the subject of philosophy at this moment.
All you appear to have is a desire to make yourself appear smart, your motives are transparent.
I suggest you stick to the field of science. That is a subject you can be good at through copy and pasting the work of others into your head.
If you do want to become a philosopher, I suggest you try to extract your mind from within itself and become a floating mind able to look at yourself from the outside. more importantly than that, to be able to look at existence from the mind of other humans and other creatures accurately. The persuit of the self is the destruction of wisdom, eternal life is the ultimate destruction of the philosopher.
Oof, that hurt. This work is original. (Except for the aforementioned Descartes quote). I can make more of these, on many subjects.
Are you one to talk? (no, really, are you speaking from experience because I'm all ears if you are

)
To detach my mind from myself, I've tried that, and man is it a odd experience. How do you keep from tripping over your own wires, so to speak? Whenever I try to view the world with myself included in it, it I end up questioning my own motivations for thinking, and then as I think about that I question the motivations for that thought and it all goes downhill from there. I know that there's something wrong with the way I'm doing it, but what?
Feeling smart feels good, but that was not my point (or perhaps it was?

). This is my exact problem, I can't stop thinking about thinking and it can get to the point where I feel vertigo.
By becoming a floating mind, you mean become empathetic? That's what I try to do on a daily basis, understand what seems to be chaos and insanity (mainly in the form of the actions of my teachers). There seems to be a great deal of it, and I'm beginning to wonder if I'm the source.
-Penguin