Questions and Answers
I was listening to Werner Erhard speak the other day.
Or rather, half listening.
That always happens to me with certain thinkers. I stop the recording every few minutes because my own thoughts begin branching off somewhere else. McLuhan supposedly read books like that. One paragraph would trigger an entire chain reaction and the book itself almost became secondary.
Something similar happened here.
Erhard was talking about answers and questions. I’m paraphrasing badly now, but the basic feeling was this: people are obsessed with finding answers because answers create closure. They stabilize the world. They reduce uncertainty.
And I suddenly realized how much of my own life operates that way.
Not only professionally as a social worker in Switzerland, where everybody wants certainty all the time.
Clients want the answer. Superiors want the answer. Institutions want the answer.
What is the correct intervention? What is the proper strategy? What is the best framework?
But I noticed the same machinery operating quietly inside my private life too.