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  • In Ancient Greece, at the Temple of Apollo, three maxims of critical importance were inscribed.

  • And one of these three, the one I'm most interested in at the moment, read, “certainty

  • brings ruin.”

  • And in /Ecce Homo/, Nietzsche wrote, “It is not doubt, it is certainty which makes

  • madBut to feel in this way one must be profound, abyss, philosopherWe all /fear/

  • truth…”

  • Even Socrates said that all he knew was that he didn't know.

  • So it seems that the wise are united in at least one quality: they refuse to be certain.

  • And so we're left to wonder: /why/ do they refuse to be certain?

  • I think I might have an idea why.

  • All of your actions have an effect on the world.

  • And for the purposes of this essay, let's say that if you know the effect that each

  • of your actions will have on the world, then you know the truth.

  • So if you knew the truth, then you'd know how to act to achieve any effect in the world.

  • And in this way, the truth would set you free.

  • And if you ask me, I think the only way to reach the truth is to doubt everything you

  • think you know.

  • And that's why the wise refuse to be certain: doubt is the way to truth.

  • Let me explain.

  • Imagine an area of land.

  • The land has locations and ways to those locations.

  • The land represents truth.

  • Now imagine that you have a map of that land.

  • You have a map that indicates the locations of the land and the way to those locations.

  • The map represents your knowledge.

  • So if your map overlaps with the land, then your knowledge is true, or for the purposes

  • of this video, we can say you have the truth.

  • Now imagine if the land was constantly changing, literally changing every second.

  • Your map would rarely ever be true.

  • You'd rarely have the truth.

  • But what if your map could account for the changing land.

  • What if it updated just as fast as the land changed, so you could always reach your destination?

  • Then we'd say the map was always true.

  • We could say you have the truth.

  • And so what would it mean to have the truth?

  • /It means having knowledge that works across any space and at any time./ And to return

  • to our original question, how does doubt lead to truth?

  • Doubt is testing knowledge across space and time.

  • Doubting your beliefs means taking what you think you know and finding a space or a time

  • where it doesn't hold true.

  • This will destroy the belief and force you to remake it in a way where it does hold true.

  • And if you continue to doubt and test your knowledge in this way, you will make your

  • knowledge better.

  • Your knowledge will start to hold true across more spaces and more times.

  • It will become more useful and more true, and you yourself will have more truth.

  • And if doubt leads to truth, and truth will set you free, then doubt will also set you

  • free.

  • That concludes my exploration of Nietzsche's teaching.

  • As always, this is just my opinion and understanding of Nietzsche, not advice.

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

  • Nietzsche - Challenge Yourself, Learn the Truth”.

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

  • right now.

In Ancient Greece, at the Temple of Apollo, three maxims of critical importance were inscribed.

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