Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Foolish Question Practice

Systematically asking apparently naive or obvious questions about natural processes to uncover assumptions hidden within scientific frameworks.

Nas
Why It Matters

Hodja's genius lies in asking questions that appear foolish but expose genuine blindness. Why does salt dissolve in water? Why do plants grow upward? What is time? Scientists have sophisticated answers, yet Hodja's approach suggests that truly fundamental questions often hide beneath the obvious. The Foolish Question Practice involves practitioners regularly asking the 'dumb' questions their scientific education taught them to dismiss. What actually is a species when organisms hybridize? Why does entropy increase if physics is reversible? How does subjective experience arise from objective particles? By systematically asking 'childish' questions, practitioners avoid the professional scientist's occupational blindness—the ability to work within paradigms without examining paradigm-foundations. Applied to scientific naturalism as spirituality, this cultivates healthy skepticism. It prevents naturalism from calcifying into dogma where 'obvious' materialist assumptions go unexamined. The practice keeps inquiry genuinely open, maintaining science as a form of humility rather than a pretense to ultimate knowledge.

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