Acharya Prashant distinguishes between belief and faith, explaining that belief is rooted in information, evidence, and logical reasons. When one trusts someone after knowing their history, financial status, or background, it is merely belief. Faith, however, is causeless and remains undisturbed even in the absence of information. It is a state where one knows something to be true without needing external proof. He references Patanjali to highlight that evidence is merely a mental modification, whereas faith neither demands nor bows to such evidence. Even if the world provides proof to the contrary, the heart of a faithful person remains certain. He describes faith as a form of "sweet foolishness" that transcends the intellect. He clarifies that there are two types of foolishness: one that is below intelligence and another that goes beyond it. Faith is the latter; it is not a lack of intelligence but a conscious choice to move beyond logic. While a logical mind uses physics to explain a waterfall through gravity and equations, it fails to understand the actual joy and essence of the flow. Similarly, faith understands the consequences of an action but chooses to proceed out of a higher sense of joy and purpose that logic cannot grasp. Finally, the speaker explains faith as the path to supreme awakening. Ordinary awakening is the transition from sleep to a state of logic, knowledge, and ego. However, supreme awakening is the state where one possesses these tools but chooses to transcend them. Knowledge is only a means to reach a point where it can eventually be discarded. Faith is not blind; it is the opening of the "eyes of the mind" to truths that cannot be captured by physical senses or scientific instruments. It is the willingness to trust in the intangible and the immeasurable.