A Socratic practice adapted to arid contexts where seemingly absurd inquiry breaks through assumptions and reveals hidden possibilities.
Hodja is famous for asking questions that seem ridiculous but contain profound insight. "Why do you seek water where water cannot be?" leads to examination of assumption. In desert life, conventional wisdom often fails—the strategies that work in abundance become liabilities in scarcity. By deliberately asking foolish questions—"What if sand held more water than we think? What if we need less than we believe?"—we crack open closed thinking. This practice invites the examined life through interrogation, play, and gentle mockery of certainty. The art lies in asking from genuine curiosity rather than cynicism, in creating space for unconventional answers. In arid landscapes where survival sometimes depends on thinking differently, the foolish question becomes a practical tool. Laughter accompanies the asking, making wisdom accessible rather than burdensome. The examined life means never accepting answers prematurely, always wondering if what seems obvious deserves further questioning.
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