Acharya Prashant addresses the human mind's violent tendency to control and possess everything through knowledge. He explains that the mind's desire to 'know the unknown' is an act of aggression and a refusal to surrender. To resolve this, he introduces the term 'Agnaya' (the Unknowable), which signifies that which cannot be known by its very nature. He asserts that Truth is unknowable and that while knowledge is a form of control, devotion is total surrender. The mind seeks knowledge to become a master, feeling restless and violent when faced with a secret or a mystery it cannot grasp. However, the soul or the foundation of knowledge cannot be contained within knowledge itself, just as a house's foundation cannot be kept inside the kitchen. He emphasizes that true surrender is not directed toward an object, person, or scripture, but is the simple act of the head bowing before the Unknowable. If one bows before something they claim to know, they are merely bowing to their own mental projections and ego. Acharya Prashant encourages living with the courage of not knowing and the art of living in insecurity, without maps or pre-planned certainties. He clarifies that the soul (Atma) is a non-doer and does not issue instructions or commands. Everything that arises, including questions and thoughts, originates from the mind. The relationship between the soul and the mind is one of love and invitation, not dictation or orders, as the soul is non-dual and has no 'other' to command.