Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Question of the Farmer's Answer

A framework where farmers learn to ask better seasonal questions rather than seek fixed answers, embodying Nasreddin's preference for examined inquiry.

Nas
Why It Matters

Nasreddin is famous for responding to direct questions with further questions, refusals to answer, or paradoxical replies that frustrate those seeking simple truth. Applied to the farmer's calendar, this becomes a liberating practice: instead of asking 'when should I plant?' (seeking a fixed answer), farmers learn to ask 'what does my soil need now? What are my local conditions telling me? What have I learned from last year's mistakes?' This question-practice aligns with Nasreddin's belief that examined life produces wisdom while unexamined answers produce foolishness. The farmer's seasonal calendar becomes not a prescription to follow but a collection of better questions to ask repeatedly. This shift from answer-seeking to question-asking makes farmers genuinely wise rather than merely obedient, transforms the calendar from dogma to dialogue, and honors both tradition and individual observation.

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