Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Beginner's Knowledge

Nasreddin's cherished ignorance becomes a deliberate practice where experienced climbers unlearn expertise to recover the wonder and presence of genuine novices.

Nas
Why It Matters

Nasreddin Hodja embodies not naive ignorance but cultivated beginner's mind—the deliberate forgetting of habitual knowledge that allows genuine perception. Experienced climbers face a particular challenge: expertise creates filters that prevent fresh observation. You've 'seen' this type of mountain before, so you miss what makes this one unique. You 'know' how to climb, so you stop noticing the actual climb. Nasreddin's tradition suggests that the examined life requires periodic unlearning. Advanced climbers can practice returning to beginner's knowledge: approaching familiar peaks as if for the first time, asking supposedly-answered questions again, noticing details that expertise usually bypasses. Mountains at high altitude enforce this involuntarily—thin air and extreme conditions make automatic responses impossible. You cannot rely on habit; you must attend consciously to breathing, to foot placement, to the immediate experience. Nasreddin's beginner's knowledge becomes a deliberate cultivation: the willingness to not-know despite experience. This paradoxically deepens understanding. When climbers release the burden of expertise, they discover subtleties that competence obscures. The joyful examined life includes this recovery of wonder—approaching mountains repeatedly not to demonstrate mastery but to continuously discover their inexhaustible complexity.

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