Asking the 'stupid' question that reveals hidden assumptions when survival depends on clarity in extreme environments.
Nasreddin Hodja's greatest wisdom often comes through apparent foolishness—asking the question everyone else is too proud to voice. In extreme environments like polar wastelands, high altitude peaks, or deep ocean trenches, the team member who asks "Wait, why are we doing this exactly?" may save lives by exposing flawed assumptions. The examined life requires permission to seem foolish. When oxygen is thin or pressure crushing, the naive question cuts through expert consensus that has stopped evolving. Hodja teaches that humor and seeming ignorance are tools for penetrating group-think. In extremes, this paradoxical wisdom becomes practical: the explorer who asks the unpopular question survives; the one who nods silently does not. This concept invites practitioners to cultivate intellectual humility and strategic naïveté as survival skills.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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