“The mind often mistakes recognition for comprehension.”
Most of us encounter the same ideas repeatedly throughout our lives. We hear them in classrooms, conversations, books, and social media until they become familiar. Eventually, we stop questioning them- not because we have understood them, but because we have become accustomed to them.
This is one of the most subtle obstacles to learning.
Recognizing an idea is not the same as understanding it. A person may confidently define gravity without knowing why objects fall. Another may quote the Bhagavad Gītā without reflecting on its philosophical foundations. Familiarity creates the comforting illusion that inquiry is no longer necessary.
True understanding begins where familiarity ends.
It begins when we ask why something is true rather than merely accepting that it is. It grows through questioning, reasoning, and the willingness to revise our assumptions when better explanations emerge.
Perhaps the simplest way to test understanding is this:
If you could no longer remember the conclusion, would you still be able to discover it through reasoning?
If the answer is yes, you have likely understood it.
If the answer is no, you may only have become familiar with it.
