Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Question Collection

Collecting objects as vessels for unanswered questions rather than completed answers or final meanings.

Nas
Why It Matters

Rather than seeking objects that confirm what you already know, Hodja's tradition suggests collecting things that perplex, challenge, or invite sustained curiosity. A question collection reverses the traditional collector's impulse toward certainty and completion. Instead of acquiring an item to 'finish' a set, you gather objects specifically because they resist easy interpretation. Why does this particular stone interest you? What story does this old letter suggest but never complete? What does this anonymous photograph make you wonder about? This approach transforms collecting into an act of philosophical play—each object becomes a koan, a riddle worth living with. The collection itself becomes a cabinet of inquiry rather than a monument to mastery. Hodja's humor arose from asking impossible questions with genuine sincerity. Your question collection embodies this same spirit: treating mysterious, ambiguous, or enigmatic objects as teachers that keep you intellectually and imaginatively alive.

Helpful guides
Nas
Play & Joy
Peri
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