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  • In /The Brothers Karamazov/, Dostoevsky wrote, “Remember especially that you cannot be

  • the judge of anyone.

  • For there can be no judge of a criminal on earth until the judge knows that he, too,

  • is a criminal, exactly the same as the one who stands before him, and that he is perhaps

  • most guilty of all for the crime of the one standing before him.

  • When he understands this, then he will be able to be a judge.

  • However mad that may seem, it is true.

  • For if I myself were righteous, perhaps there would be no criminal standing before me now.

  • If you are able to take upon yourself the crime of the criminal who stands before you

  • and whom you are judging in your heart, do so at once, and suffer for him yourself, and

  • let him go without reproach.”

  • And Dostoevsky's character is saying something pretty powerful here: that by freeing your

  • mind of judgment, you can create a better world.

  • But how does a mind free of judgment lead to a better world?

  • The key to creating a better world is correction: we have to be able to correct our mistakes.

  • And the only way to correct our mistakes is through learning, and only a mind free of

  • judgment is capable of endless learning.

  • Learning happens in two steps: prediction, and then correction.

  • First, you make a prediction about how to achieve a specific goal in the world.

  • And then if you're wrong, you correct your prediction until your goal is achieved.

  • So again, there are two steps to learning: prediction, and then correction.

  • And a mind free of judgment is naturally predictive.

  • It naturally makes and corrects its predictions, or in other words, a mind free of judgment

  • naturally learns.

  • But how do you free your mind from judgment?

  • By dropping your desire for certainty.

  • A mind that desires certainty is a mind that quickly falls into delusion, because certainty

  • is only possible in delusion.

  • A certain mind says, “I know.”

  • It's sees itself as perfect and believes it has grasped the truth.

  • And once a mind believes it has the truth, it stops making predictions, and it starts

  • making judgments.

  • Because there's no value in making predictions when you believe your knowledge is perfect.

  • And because the judgmental mind believes it's perfect, it's not open to being corrected,

  • so naturally it falls into delusion, and delusion leads to suffering.

  • So how do you drop the desire for certainty?

  • It happens naturally when you see that certainty is impossible.

  • How do you know the sun will come up tomorrow?

  • You don't—until it's already happened.

  • We can be certain of things that have happened in the past, but the future always lies in

  • uncertainty.

  • There's no reason that tomorrow has to be similar to today.

  • The idea that the future has to resemble the past is an act of faith, and once you really

  • internalize that, you'll probably lose the desire for certainty: because it's a pointless

  • chase.

  • And once you drop the desire for certainty, you'll free your mind of judgment, and once

  • you free your mind of judgment, you'll open yourself up to endless learning, and once

  • you open yourself up to endless learning, you'll be able to correct your errors, and

  • once you're able to correct your errors, you'll create a better world.

  • Now let's take a look at the difference between a mind trapped by judgment and a mind

  • free of judgment.

  • Candace is a literary agent, and one day, a writer named Thomas comes into her office.

  • Thomas is very eccentric, and doesn't fit the image Candace has in her mind of a successful

  • writer.

  • And since Candace has a judgmental mind, she immediately writes him off.

  • She's not even interested in testing her knowledge.

  • /I know what good writers look and act like/, she thinks.

  • /And he's not one of them./So Thomas takes his novel to a different agent: Lucy.

  • Lucy sees him and thinks, /well, he certainly doesn't look like or act like most successful

  • authors that come in here.

  • But hey, that's just my prediction.

  • I could be wrong.

  • Let me read his work and find out./So Lucy reads his work and believes that it's a

  • masterpiece.

  • She realizes her original prediction was wrong and corrects it.

  • She signs Thomas, whose book goes on to become a once in a lifetime classicselling over

  • 500 million copies.

  • And between these two examples, we see the difference between a judgmental mind and a

  • predictive one.

  • The predictive mind doubts its own knowledge, and this doubt leads to testing, testing leads

  • to error, error leads to correction, and correction leads to greatness.

  • But the judgmental mind is certain of its own knowledge, and certainty leads to delusion,

  • and delusion leads to suffering.

  • So if you see the lie behind certainty, you'll drop your desire for it.

  • You'll be OK with living in uncertainty.

  • And if you drop the desire for certainty, you'll free yourself of judgment.

  • And if you free yourself of judgment, if you stop letting others judge you, if you stop

  • judging yourself and others, you'll enter a space of endless learning.

  • And through endless learning, you can correct your errors, and by correcting your errors,

  • you can create a better world.

  • That concludes my exploration of Dostoevsky's teaching in /The Brothers Karamazov/.

  • As always, this is just my opinion and understanding of Dostoevsky's teaching, not advice.

  • Feel free to use this information however you like, and if you have a different take

  • on the his words, I'd love to hear your perspective in the comments.

  • If you liked the video, please consider liking the video.

  • And if you're looking for another video to watch after this one, I recommend watching

  • my videoDostoevsky - Be Careful of the Ideas You Plant in Others”.

  • I'll put a link to it in the description below and in the top right of the screen

  • right now.

In /The Brothers Karamazov/, Dostoevsky wrote, “Remember especially that you cannot be

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