Ask Osho!

Who can become a better disciple: a learned fool or an unlearned fool?

Synthesized from Source definition

"The true disciple is not the learned fool or the unlearned fool, but the blessed fool who recognizes his ignorance and is ready to embrace the wisdom of not knowing."

According to Osho, neither the learned fool nor the unlearned fool is the true disciple; the best disciple is the “blessed fool” who knows he does not know. This maturity usually comes after passing through learning, finding it burdensome, and dropping secondhand knowledge to regain living sensitivity. Thus a ripened learned fool, ready to relinquish head-stuff, stands closer to discipleship than a simple, untested innocent.
The best learner admits “I don’t know” and lets go of pretending; a know-it-all who gets tired of knowing can reach this sooner than someone who’s just naive.
Why this matters practically
- Cultivates humility that opens real learning and transformation.
- Helps you drop rigid beliefs and meet life with fresh sensitivity and wonder.
- Shows intellectuals to use knowledge as a step, then let it go.
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