Yacob's practice of rigorous questioning to clarify ethical assumptions, applied as a decision-making tool for tax strategy evaluation.
Like Socrates, Zera Yacob believed that wisdom begins with questioning assumptions. Rather than accepting comfortable answers about tax strategy, the sophistic method demands interrogation: Why do you minimize taxes? What story do you tell yourself about fairness? Would you defend this decision to someone harmed by reduced public funding? What would change if everyone acted similarly? This questioning method serves as an ethical compass for navigating gray areas between avoidance and evasion. It prevents rationalization by requiring articulation and examination of justifying logic. The method is not about reaching predetermined conclusions but about genuine intellectual honesty. When applied to tax decisions, it exposes whether you're reasoning or merely rationalizing. Yacob's practice suggests that ethical tax behavior requires ongoing interrogation of one's choices, not passive acceptance of what's legally permissible. The questions themselves become the moral practice.
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