Siddhartha Ch4
By: Wendy • Essay • 295 Words • February 21, 2010 • 764 Views
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Response to Student D’s Question
Siddhartha, as of the events of chapter 4, believes that there is knowledge that can not be taught by a mentor. Though, this knowledge of whom he speaks about is not stated directly. This knowledge, in my interpretation, is what Siddhartha calls the Self. The Self is an abstract knowledge that lies deep within the mind. The reason this understanding of the Self is unable to be taught is because the Self in each individual is very unique and each Self must be approached in its own unique form. An instructor can aide an individual but, the individual must understand the distinctiveness of their Self on their own. The discovering of the self, in my point of view, is what separates the immature adolescents and a mature adult. At the inauguration of the story Siddhartha was an adolescent boy that was at the commencement of doubting the teachings of the Brahmin, however after Siddhartha traveled with the Samanas and met the fair mistress Kamala, he tends to act