Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Asking Better Questions Than Seeking Answers

Valuing the quality of questions you ask over the certainty of answers you find, as questions keep inquiry alive while answers prematurely close exploration.

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Why It Matters

The Hodja is famous for asking ostensibly simple questions that unsettle: 'Why do you lock the barn after the horse escapes?' or 'If you've already decided, why ask my opinion?' These questions don't provide answers but reframe situations entirely. Asking better questions than seeking answers reflects the truth that premature certainty closes the examined life, while genuine inquiry keeps it open. In this practice, you learn to notice when you've stopped questioning and started defending an answer. The examined playful life means developing the discipline of curiosity—learning to ask what's actually true rather than what confirms what you already believe, asking what you're afraid to know, asking what the other person in a conflict genuinely experiences. The Hodja's tradition suggests that the quality of your questions determines the quality of your life. Better questions generate better understanding, more creative solutions, and deeper self-knowledge. This shifts the examined life from a destination to be reached to an ongoing practice of ever-refined inquiry.

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The Examined Path Through The examined playful life
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