『# Being Wrong Is Your Ticket to a Bigger Universe』のカバーアート

# Being Wrong Is Your Ticket to a Bigger Universe

# Being Wrong Is Your Ticket to a Bigger Universe

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概要

# The Wonderful Absurdity of Being Wrong

Here's a delightful secret: being wrong is one of the most underrated privileges of being human.

Think about it. When you discover you've been mistaken about something—whether it's a historical fact, the actual lyrics to that song you've belted out for years, or your certainty that tomatoes are vegetables—something magical happens. The universe suddenly becomes *larger*. A door you didn't know existed swings open, and there's more reality than there was a moment ago.

The Ancient Greeks had a word, *aletheia*, often translated as "truth," but literally meaning "un-concealing" or "revealing." Truth wasn't a static thing you possessed; it was an active uncovering, like pulling back a curtain. Every time you're wrong, you get to participate in this revealing. How thrilling is that?

Children understand this instinctively. Watch a toddler learn that water can be ice, or that the moon follows them in the car. Their faces light up not with embarrassment at their previous ignorance, but with pure joy at the expansion of their world. Somewhere along the way, many of us trade this wonder for the fool's gold of always being right.

But consider the alternative: if you were never wrong, you'd either be omniscient (unlikely, and honestly, sounds boring) or you'd never learn anything new. Being wrong is the admission price to growth, and it's actually quite affordable—merely a small slice of ego.

The physicist Richard Feynman once said he'd rather have questions he couldn't answer than answers he couldn't question. What a magnificent framework for daily life! Imagine approaching your commute, your conversations, your firmly held opinions with that spirit of playful uncertainty. Not paralyzed skepticism, but adventurous curiosity.

Here's your challenge: today, seek out one thing you might be wrong about. Not in a self-flagellating way, but as an expedition. Check that "fact" you always repeat at parties. Question why you take that particular route to work. Ask someone whose views differ from yours to explain their thinking—and actually listen as if they might be onto something.

Being wrong isn't the opposite of being smart; it's the price of admission. It means you're still growing, still discovering, still participating in the grand human tradition of figuring things out as we go.

After all, the only people who are never wrong are those who've stopped being curious. And what could be more boring than that?

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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