Why I'm Not That Interested in Answers.
For a long time, I assumed that the goal of learning was to find answers.
The logic seemed sound.
If a person accumulates enough information, then they should understand the world around them better.
However, over time I started to notice something interesting.
Answers often have a limited shelf life.
Context changes.
Technology changes.
Markets change.
And many answers that seemed definitive end up losing relevance over time.
Important questions, on the other hand, seem to behave differently.
Some remain relevant for years.
Even decades.
That's why, when I observe a new technology, market, or project, I'm rarely only interested in what's happening today.
I'm interested in the bigger question that might be lurking behind that change.
Because many times an update is not just about an update.
It can be about value.
About ownership.
About trust.
About decisions.
About adaptation.
And maybe understanding a transformation isn't just about watching what changes.
Maybe it also involves identifying what enduring question keeps popping up once again in a different form.
That's why I'm more interested in questions than answers.
Because answers tend to describe the present.
But the right questions often help us interpret the future.
#Nomadacripto