A practice of interrogating every collected item with childlike curiosity, treating possession as an invitation to deeper inquiry rather than conclusion.
Nasreddin embodies the interrogative spirit—he asks absurd questions that crack open certainty. Applied to collecting, Question Marks Over Objects means refusing to let any acquisition settle into dead certainty. A collected item becomes a portal for wondering: Why was this made? Who touched it before me? What problem did it solve? What would it say about me if I kept it? What does my desire for it reveal? This transforms collection from static accumulation into dynamic philosophy. Each object becomes a Socratic prompt. Nasreddin's tradition celebrates the examined life, and objects offer endless material for examination. A collector might keep a notebook alongside their collection, recording the questions each item provokes. Over months, patterns emerge—obsessions, fears, longings, contradictions in taste and value. The collection becomes a mirror for self-knowledge. Play enters through permission to ask silly questions without demanding answers, letting curiosity itself be the reward.
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