Acharya Prashant addresses a student's question about a paradox observed in her class, where male students showed higher self-esteem than female students despite all having cleared a tough entrance exam. He explains that this paradox arises from a flawed hypothesis, which is that clearing an exam should automatically lead to high self-esteem. When facts contradict a hypothesis, the hypothesis must be wrong. He introduces the concept of 'Prakriti', or Mother Nature, which gives rise to our bodies and assigns roles. Self-esteem, he states, is linked to fulfilling the role assigned by Prakriti. Using an analogy, he explains that if someone is asked to fetch vegetables but brings back valuable diamonds instead, they still haven't fulfilled the assigned task and won't feel confident. Similarly, in the scheme of Mother Nature, a woman's primary biological role is to reproduce. Even if a woman achieves great professional or academic success, she might feel an inner void because she carries this biological mandate in her consciousness. In contrast, a man's mandate from Prakriti is to succeed in the world, so professional success brings him fulfillment. He clarifies that this is the story of many accomplished women who feel a void despite their achievements. The speaker identifies the real oppressor not just as society, but as the body itself, with its biological programming and DNA. He asserts that the woman must challenge her body and its biological mandate. The purpose of life is not to merely follow biological imperatives but to rise higher, realize one's bondages, and break them. The body should be seen as a primary bondage and used as a vehicle for liberation, not as an end in itself. He concludes by urging women to disown the goals given by a male-centered society and to channel their bodies towards their real goal of liberation.