Acharya Prashant addresses the nature of knowledge and the human search for fulfillment, responding to a question about the boundless knowledge mentioned by Kabir Saheb. He asserts that existence itself does not demand that a person possess special knowledge to be complete; rather, it is the individual who constantly asserts their own incompleteness. He points out that the human mind is perpetually seeking, sniffing, and probing for information, news, and answers, which serves as a validation of an internal hunger. He challenges the listener to identify what they are truly looking for, noting that despite visiting countless destinations, trying various teachings, and experiencing all life situations from birth to death, they remain empty-handed and restless. He explains that the knowledge Kabir Saheb refers to is actually the realization of what has not been found in any worldly direction, relationship, or point in time. The speaker observes that people are often certain of their paths even when those paths lead to dead ends, comparing this persistence to a tragic joke where one continues to stumble despite claiming to know the way. He suggests that instead of searching for an external object or special knowledge, one should look at the 'searcher'—the one whose face has become dry and hardened by disappointment. He concludes by inviting the listener to shift their confidence from their supposed 'knowing' to an honest recognition of their own foolishness, suggesting that adding more knowledge to a person already suffocating under it would be like adding weight to someone already crushed by a rock.