Adopting radical naiveté and childlike inquiry as a rigorous epistemological practice that cuts through assumptions and returns to foundational observations.
Nasreddin Hodja's defining characteristic is his willingness to ask the supposedly obvious question, often with transformative results. In scientific naturalism as spirituality, the fool's question becomes a deliberate method—returning repeatedly to what we think we already know and asking 'But why really?' with genuine openness. Children ask why the sky is blue; scientists eventually discovered the answer required quantum mechanics and Rayleigh scattering. The Hodja's tradition teaches that the deepest understanding often emerges not from complexity but from recovering innocence. Scientific naturalism as spirituality incorporates this by institutionalizing wonder: deliberately looking at familiar natural phenomena as though seeing them for the first time. Why does the sun rise? What actually is sleep? How do trees know when to grow leaves? By asking such 'foolish' questions with genuine curiosity rather than presumed answers, we access both rigorous thinking and spiritual awakening. The Hodja and the scientist share this: willingness to seem foolish in service of genuine understanding.
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