Friday, July 17, 2026

The Fruit Stall: A Parable About the Nature of Knowledge

 


A teacher took his students to a summer camp. Instead of giving them a lecture on the nature of knowledge, he decided to teach the lesson through an experience.


He led the students to a large stall displaying thousands of different kinds of fruits. Each student was given a basket.


The teacher said:


"You have ten minutes. Within that time, collect as many different kinds of fruits as you can."


Then he added an important detail:


"Not everything displayed here is a real fruit. Some are artificial objects made to look exactly like fruits. By looking at them or touching them, you will not be able to tell the difference."


After ten minutes, the students returned with their baskets and gathered around the teacher.


He asked,


"Can anyone claim that their basket contains every kind of fruit in this stall?"


No one raised a hand.


The teacher replied,


"Of course not. You were given only ten minutes. Had you been given more time, you would have collected many more varieties."


Then he asked,


"Can anyone confidently say that everything in your basket is a genuine fruit?"


Again, there was silence.


"You cannot be certain," he said. "Some of the items you collected may be artificial fruits."


Finally, he added,


"Many of you have collected the same fruits. Yet it is also possible that one student has found a fruit that no one else has."


The teacher then said,


"Now replace the word 'fruit' with the word 'knowledge,' and the meaning of this exercise becomes clear."


Human knowledge is very much like these baskets of fruit.


First, no one possesses all knowledge. Every person's understanding is limited by their time, experiences, opportunities, culture, and perspective. Therefore, no one can honestly claim, "I know everything."


Second, we cannot be certain that everything we believe is true. Our minds can contain misconceptions, false assumptions, biases, incomplete information, and mistaken beliefs. Like the artificial fruits, false ideas often resemble the truth. Therefore, knowledge must always remain open to examination and correction.


Third, some knowledge is shared by many people, while some knowledge may be unique to particular individuals. Because every person has different experiences, each sees reality from a slightly different angle. This is why listening to others expands our own understanding.


The parable also teaches that knowledge is shaped by time and opportunity. The students collected only what they could within ten minutes. Likewise, our knowledge depends on the opportunities life gives us to learn. Greater exposure, deeper study, and richer experiences broaden our understanding.


Another lesson is that appearance is not always reality. Just as artificial fruits can deceive the eye, ideas that seem convincing may nevertheless be false. This is why critical thinking, careful investigation, and the willingness to test our assumptions are essential.


The story also highlights the importance of shared learning. If all the students pooled their baskets together, they would gain a far more complete picture of the fruit stall than any individual could achieve alone. Human knowledge advances in the same way. Science, philosophy, history, and every field of learning grow through the contributions of countless people across generations.


Furthermore, knowledge is always subject to revision. As the students later discover which fruits are genuine and which are artificial, they must be willing to discard their mistakes. In the same way, intellectual honesty requires us to revise our beliefs whenever better evidence becomes available.


Ultimately, this parable teaches the virtue of intellectual humility. Wisdom begins when we recognise two simple truths: there is much that I do not know, and some of what I think I know may be mistaken.


Knowledge is not a possession to be completed but a lifelong journey of discovery. Truth is not the private property of any individual; it is something we seek together with humility, openness, curiosity, and a willingness to learn from one another.


The truly wise person is not the one who claims to know everything, but the one who recognises both the limits of their knowledge and the vastness of what remains to be discovered.

Monday, July 13, 2026

From Abraham to Islam

Muhammad's Vision and the Emergence of a Distinct Religious Community

Abraham as the Common Ancestor

Muhammad understood Jews, Christians, and Arabs as sharing a common connection to Abraham. In the Qur'an, Abraham is presented as the great patriarch whose life exemplified complete devotion and submission to the one true God. Rather than identifying Abraham as exclusively Jewish or Christian, the Qur'an portrays him as a model of pure monotheism and wholehearted obedience to God.

According to Muhammad's message, the true legacy of Abraham was not primarily an ethnic identity but a spiritual one: living in complete submission to the will of God.

Returning to the Faith of Abraham

Muhammad believed that Abraham's original faith was pure submission to the one God and that, over time, later religious communities had departed from that original faith in important respects. For this reason, he called people to return to what he understood to be the authentic religion of Abraham.

The Qur'an identifies this original faith as Islam, a word that literally means "submission" to God. In this understanding, Islam was not presented as an entirely new religion but as the restoration and completion of the faith that God had revealed through Abraham and the earlier prophets.

Muhammad's mission, therefore, was not simply to unite Abraham's descendants on the basis of their common ancestry. Rather, it was to restore what he believed was the original true religion ordained by God for all humanity.

The Response of the Jewish and Christian Communities

Many historians believe that Muhammad initially expected at least some Jews and Christians to recognize him as a prophet who had come to restore the faith of Abraham. Since both communities already believed in the God of Abraham and revered many of the same prophets, Muhammad appears to have seen his message as standing in continuity with their own religious heritage.

However, this expectation was largely unmet. Most Jewish groups in Medina rejected Muhammad's claim to prophethood, and Christians likewise did not accept his message as the fulfillment of their faith. As these disagreements deepened, relations between Muhammad and many of these communities became increasingly strained.

The Emergence of Islam as a Distinct Religion

Over time, the Muslim community developed into a distinct religious community with its own identity, beliefs, practices, and institutions, separate from both Judaism and Christianity.

Although Muhammad understood his message as the restoration of Abraham's original faith, history unfolded differently. Instead of bringing Jews, Christians, and Arabs into a single restored Abrahamic community, Islam emerged as a separate world religion with its own sacred scripture, religious law, and communal life.

Islam's Historical Legacy

Since its emergence in the seventh century, Islam has had a profound influence on world history. It has shaped civilizations, inspired remarkable achievements in scholarship, science, philosophy, architecture, literature, and the arts, and motivated countless acts of charity, spiritual devotion, and social reform.

At the same time, like Christianity, Judaism, Hinduism, and other major world religions, Islam has also been associated at various times with political conflict, warfare, and religious violence. These realities reflect not only religious beliefs but also the complex interaction of religion with politics, culture, economics, and human ambition throughout history.

Conclusion

Muhammad's message was rooted in the conviction that all people should return to the faith of Abraham—a life of wholehearted submission to the one true God. He understood this restored faith to be Islam, the religion ordained by God from the beginning.

While many historians believe Muhammad initially hoped that at least some Jews and Christians would recognize his prophetic mission, this did not occur on a large scale. As a result, the Muslim community gradually developed into a distinct religious tradition. Today, Islam stands alongside Judaism and Christianity as one of the three major Abrahamic faiths, sharing common roots while following its own unique theological and historical path.