Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Beginner's Perpetual Stance

Maintaining radical openness and not-knowing as a permanent posture, treating every situation as novel despite accumulated experience.

Nas
Why It Matters

Despite his reputation as a wise teacher, Nasreddin consistently presents himself as confused, puzzled, and perpetually learning—even about basic matters. This concept rejects the idea that examination leads to final knowledge, instead treating genuine wisdom as an ongoing encounter with fresh mystery. The examined natural life means resisting the crystallization of experience into rigid expertise. Nature constantly surprises those who assume they understand it; each season brings variations, each moment contains elements never quite seen before. By maintaining a beginner's mind, we remain attuned to actual reality rather than our mental maps of it. This requires deliberate humility, since accumulated knowledge naturally tends toward closure. Nasreddin's perpetual confusion isn't ignorance but sophistication—he knows enough to recognize how much he doesn't know. This stance keeps us psychologically alive, receptive, and genuinely learning rather than merely confirming what we already assume.

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