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Concept
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The Expedition as Examined Life

Hodja's examined life becomes a continuous practice in extreme environments; expeditions become extended philosophical inquiries into what humans need.

Nas
Why It Matters

Socrates' examined life meant questioning assumptions. Hodja extended this into playful action. An expedition to the poles, high altitudes, or ocean depths, viewed through this lens, becomes months of continuous examination: Why am I here? What do I truly need? Who am I without comfort? What matters when everything is stripped away? These aren't academic questions but lived ones, examined through frostbite, altitude sickness, and pressure. Hodja would value expeditions not primarily for geographic achievement but for the self-knowledge they produce. The examined life in extremes reveals which beliefs are real and which are convenient. It shows which fears are wise and which are habitual. It demonstrates what connection actually means when words freeze in your throat. Teams that approach extreme expeditions as extended philosophical practice—rather than merely physical challenges—report deeper transformation. They return asking better questions, understanding themselves more honestly. The examined joyful life Hodja taught becomes possible precisely in these stripped-down circumstances.

Helpful guides
Nas
Play & Joy
Peri
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