The power of unlearning.

Show me a man who can unlearn silly notions and I will show you somebody who has the capacity to make meaningful progress in learning. A collection of silly ideas deeply entrenched in the mind is the greatest hurdle to intellectual progress. Take an apparently innocuous opinion such as man being the best of God's creation, or the belief that dark tea has a deleterious effect on one's fair complexion. Try making anybody who holds these, or other such views, see their utter silliness, and ninety-nine times out of a hundred you will realize how utterly futile your effort has been.

Let me first address a question that may have reared its head in the mind of the reader: What difference can belief, howsoever silly, on such trivial matters possibly make? The answer to this is that the human mind is supposed to be one whole. More than the issue itself, it is how one reaches one's conclusions that is important. You cannot be whimsical when it comes to some issues and logical on other matters. Thinking clearly and logically is a habit, not an arbitrary, case-by-case activity. If one is not careful to prune away silly thoughts on the apparently trivial matters, it is only a matter of time before one demonstrates a slipshod attitude towards the more serious issues as well.

Furthermore, reality itself must make a coherent picture in one's mind if one is to place any new items (new knowledge) into the framework already there. If reality is a room, then your view of it is like a wall-to-wall carpet. If it is cut wrong in one corner, it may be made to fit there but will inevitably leave a gap or a bulge somewhere else. Since unscrutinised ideas constitute a large part of most everybody's view of the world, getting rid of these preconceived notions is imperative if one is to make any contribution beyond regurgitating thoughts and ideas heard from random sources many of which one does not even recall. Until conscientious mental hygiene is practised and silly ideas are continuously got rid of, no real progress can be made in understanding. Unlearning, therefore, is an indispensable part of learning.

Purging the mind of silly ideas is easier said than done though. From the moment one opens one's eyes as a baby till the time one dies, there is a relentless barrage of silliness flying around in all directions, some of which is bound to stick to the psyche. The result, if one is not constantly on the lookout for clutter, is an extremely unholy mixture of some...

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