Replacing assumptions with genuine inquiry; using questions to reveal hidden problems and generate adaptive solutions.
Nasreddin Hodja's stories often involve him asking questions that expose hidden contradictions and reveal new possibilities. In extreme environments, unexamined assumptions kill. A team that assumes their equipment is adequate, that weather forecasts are reliable, or that their experience transfers to new conditions creates blind spots. The Hodja's approach involves continuous questioning paired with genuine openness to surprising answers. Why does this ice pattern suggest danger? What changed in our physiology today? How might this equipment fail? These aren't anxious ruminations but alert, curious inquiry. Expeditions that cultivate questioning cultures—where team members feel safe challenging plans, equipment choices, and leadership decisions—respond faster to emerging problems. The examined joyful life includes the freedom to ask fundamental questions even when time is short. Nasreddin's tradition teaches that the person who asks is wiser than the person who answers confidently. In extreme environments where conditions remain partially unknown, maintaining genuine curiosity prevents the false certainty that precedes disaster.
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