I remember when we were in middle school, the teacher would encourage us to ask more questions. I have never asked the teacher questions. On the one hand, I'm shy. On the other hand, I really can't ask any questions, because I can think of questions and find answers in books. What I can't believe is that almost every monitor at that time chased the teacher to ask questions after class. "Why are there so many questions?" I'm puzzled because the monitor's score in each final exam is the first in the whole grade.
Until later I saw this sentence: "the more you know, the more ignorant you are." The philosopher Zeno explained this in this way: he once drew a circle. Inside the circle is the knowledge he has mastered, and outside the circle is the boundless unknown world. The more knowledge, the larger the circle, and the longer the circle. In this way, the larger the contact surface between its edge and the external blank, so of course, there are more unknown parts.
When your vision is wider and your knowledge is wider, the more you can feel your smallness. There was once a top student in the college entrance examination who came out of a small county. Under the aura of learning tyrants, he stepped into Tsinghua University with generous scholarships given by the government and the school. Later, he found that his score was at the downstream level in the class. He had always strong self-esteem. He quickly committed suicide because of the fact that it was difficult to.
Wang Xiaobo once said that pain is anger at his incompetence. When talking to friends, he said that anger is the pain of being incompetent. I would like to add that talented people are the former, often ashamed of their inability to obtain more knowledge, while incompetent people are the latter, often angry to cover up their ignorance.
Therefore, Beethoven, a famous music master, humbly said that he "only learned a few notes". Einstein, a great scientist, said he was "really childish like a child". And they know more than we mediocre people and have a deeper understanding of the world.