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181: The Oracle's Paradox - When Not Knowing Makes You Wise

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Manage episode 514123355 series 3692810
Content provided by The Most Ancient Anamnetic Order of Trikala. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The Most Ancient Anamnetic Order of Trikala or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

How can someone who knows nothing be declared the wisest person alive?

Drake and Holly unpack the paradox that birthed Western philosophy: the Oracle at Delphi declaring Socrates wisest precisely because he knew he knew nothing. From the Dunning-Kruger effect to Zen's beginner's mind, they explore why intellectual humility might be the highest wisdom, and how admitting ignorance opens doors that certainty keeps locked.

Key Topics

• Socrates' investigation of the Oracle's pronouncement

• The three Delphic maxims and their meanings

• Docta ignorantia across mystical traditions

• Dunning-Kruger effect and the confidence of ignorance

• Beginner's mind versus expert's mind

• The difference between grasping and receiving truth

• Why the ego defends false knowing so violently

Featured Concepts

Learned Ignorance (Docta Ignorantia): The wisdom that comes from knowing the limits of your knowledge

Beginner's Mind (Shoshin): Zen concept of approaching life with openness and freedom from preconceptions

The Elenchus: Socratic method of revealing ignorance through systematic questioning

Essential Quote

"The self that's trying to know and the self that's being known are the same thing. It's like an eye trying to see itself. The very attempt creates a paradox."

Practical Takeaway

Today, catch yourself claiming to know something you don't actually know - someone's motivation, future outcomes, or your own limitations. Practice saying "I don't know" and notice what possibilities open.

Key References

• Plato, The Apology

The Cloud of Unknowing

• Byron Katie, The Work

• John Keats on "negative capability"

About Ab Immemorabili: Ancient wisdom meets modern minds. Join Drake & Holly for explorations of philosophy, consciousness, and transformation.

Contact: [email protected] | www.maaoot.org

The wisdom you seek has always been within you. You're not learning it. You're remembering it.

  continue reading

8 episodes

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iconShare
 
Manage episode 514123355 series 3692810
Content provided by The Most Ancient Anamnetic Order of Trikala. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The Most Ancient Anamnetic Order of Trikala or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

How can someone who knows nothing be declared the wisest person alive?

Drake and Holly unpack the paradox that birthed Western philosophy: the Oracle at Delphi declaring Socrates wisest precisely because he knew he knew nothing. From the Dunning-Kruger effect to Zen's beginner's mind, they explore why intellectual humility might be the highest wisdom, and how admitting ignorance opens doors that certainty keeps locked.

Key Topics

• Socrates' investigation of the Oracle's pronouncement

• The three Delphic maxims and their meanings

• Docta ignorantia across mystical traditions

• Dunning-Kruger effect and the confidence of ignorance

• Beginner's mind versus expert's mind

• The difference between grasping and receiving truth

• Why the ego defends false knowing so violently

Featured Concepts

Learned Ignorance (Docta Ignorantia): The wisdom that comes from knowing the limits of your knowledge

Beginner's Mind (Shoshin): Zen concept of approaching life with openness and freedom from preconceptions

The Elenchus: Socratic method of revealing ignorance through systematic questioning

Essential Quote

"The self that's trying to know and the self that's being known are the same thing. It's like an eye trying to see itself. The very attempt creates a paradox."

Practical Takeaway

Today, catch yourself claiming to know something you don't actually know - someone's motivation, future outcomes, or your own limitations. Practice saying "I don't know" and notice what possibilities open.

Key References

• Plato, The Apology

The Cloud of Unknowing

• Byron Katie, The Work

• John Keats on "negative capability"

About Ab Immemorabili: Ancient wisdom meets modern minds. Join Drake & Holly for explorations of philosophy, consciousness, and transformation.

Contact: [email protected] | www.maaoot.org

The wisdom you seek has always been within you. You're not learning it. You're remembering it.

  continue reading

8 episodes

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