Acharya Prashant elaborates on a quote by Ramana Maharshi regarding the sign of wisdom (viveka). He explains that Brahman, or Truth, is the pure, un-altered, un-alterable, and incorruptible center of the mind. In contrast, the ordinary mind is fickle, destructible, suffering, and prone to corruption and influences. A mind that is not centered on the ego or the 'I-sense' but on something beyond, or on nothing at all, is the veritable Truth. The speaker then focuses on the phrase "slight difference in the Supreme Brahman." He explains that for the ordinary mind, everything makes a difference—the time of day, wealth, poverty, temperature, or age. This susceptibility to the influence of conditions means such a mind is not Brahman. The mind that is Brahman is one to which nothing makes a difference; it is a pure mind that cannot be touched, influenced, distorted, or conditioned. This is the meaning of not seeing even a slight difference in the Supreme Brahman. The word "difference" is synonymous with change, time, the world, influence, and incompletion. When one's real inner condition cannot be altered by the world, there is just Brahman. However, Acharya Prashant introduces a critical distinction. While it is a great blessing that nothing makes a difference to the Truth, it is a huge danger sign if nothing makes a difference to the false. If nothing affects the false, it signifies that the falseness is deeply entrenched and chronic, making it very difficult to uproot. Something must make a difference to falseness. The false needs to know things that will expose and dissolve its falseness; it needs to go to the right places to be rid of its falseness. Only the Truth does not need to know anything or go anywhere.