Using specific interrogative methods that dissolve false certainty and reveal the productive ignorance at the heart of genuine inquiry.
Hodja frequently responds to questions with counter-questions or absurd literal interpretations that expose hidden assumptions. This technique—not answering but reframing—becomes a spiritual practice within scientific naturalism. Rather than accepting problems as stated, we examine the conceptual framework generating them. When faced with the question "Why does nature seem designed?" the Hodja's method asks: "What assumptions about design, intention, and observation are embedded in this question?" This reframing often dissolves the apparent mystery, revealing it as a confusion of language. Scientific naturalism benefits from this constant interrogation of what we think we're asking. The deepest mysteries—consciousness, time, quantum mechanics—often prove partly to be puzzles generated by how our language carves up reality. The Hodja's question practice involves playfully examining the structure of our questions before rushing toward answers. This develops intellectual humility and reveals that some "mysteries" dissolve not when solved but when properly understood as category errors.
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