Bringing philosophical examination to the simplest seasonal act—seed selection and planting—as gateway to deeper understanding.
The examined life begins with examination of fundamentals. 'The Examined Seed' applies Socratic questioning to what farmers often take for granted: Why this seed variety? Why this timing? What does the seed reveal about my relationship to land, future, and inheritance? Nasreddin frequently begins with the most basic, obvious objects—a pot, a donkey, a door—and reveals their philosophical depths through playful questioning. Similarly, holding a seed and asking genuine questions (not rhetorical ones) opens perception. The seed contains paradox: individual yet part of a vast lineage; dead until planted yet alive throughout. Examining seeds connects farmers to genetics, climate adaptation, ancestral knowledge, and their own assumptions about yield and diversity. This practice transforms planting from mechanical action into philosophical engagement, grounding the examined joyful life in actual seasonal work.
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