A practice of asking seemingly naive or childlike questions to expose complexity and challenge expert certainty in any domain.
Hodja's character embodies the power of feigned innocence—asking 'Why?' with genuine curiosity rather than challenging authority directly. The Innocent Question Method is a practical framework for dismantling jargon, pretense, and false expertise by returning to first principles through simple inquiry. When Hodja asks the mullah why people bury the dead if they will rise again, he exposes the logical gap between doctrine and practice without confrontation. This approach honors both wisdom traditions and genuine inquiry, creating space for authentic dialogue. In modern contexts, this method combats groupthink and specialized opacity by encouraging anyone—regardless of credential—to ask fundamental questions. For practitioners, it cultivates intellectual humility while simultaneously revealing the shakiness of assumed knowledge. This framework proves especially valuable in professional and educational settings where consensus has calcified into unexamined dogma.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.