The paradox that true understanding comes not from preliminary study but from direct engagement, making early action a form of learning.
Taoist philosophy emphasizes returning to fundamental roots rather than accumulating surface knowledge. Laozi suggested that verbose explanation obscures what direct experience teaches. When starting before ready, you sacrifice the comfortable illusion of comprehensiveness for immediate contact with reality. This direct experience is the root—everything else is branches. Modern education encourages preliminary mastery before action, but Taoist wisdom inverts this: begin, and your mistakes become your best teachers. Each attempt returns you to fundamentals; each failure clarifies what matters. This approach transforms starting before ready from a risk into a learning methodology. The incompleteness you fear becomes your curriculum. By beginning imperfectly, you access knowledge unavailable through mere study, creating authentic understanding grounded in real conditions rather than theoretical ones.
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