Acharya Prashant explains that the current education system functions as a method for information processing and memory testing, effectively turning students into "knowledge loaders." He argues that while children initially require external information for physical survival, there comes a stage—around eleven years of age—when these external crutches must be withdrawn to allow the internal faculty to blossom. He posits that the grand purpose of education is to rid an individual of the biological conditioning they are born with, yet modern education often adds a layer of social conditioning instead. He describes this as a state where the "medicine is worse than the disease," as it creates more mental baggage rather than obliterating it. He further distinguishes between the brain and the mind, stating that the brain is a physical apparatus for memory and information, whereas the mind involves understanding that transcends material programming. He clarifies that the soul is not material and cannot be contained within the body; instead, the body exists within the soul. He defines spirituality as the study of both the object and the subject, noting that science is a subset of spirituality that lacks focus on the observer. True awakening, he suggests, begins with the realization of suffering and involves a 24/7 state of meditativeness rather than a scheduled activity. Finally, Acharya Prashant discusses the concepts of Vidya and Avidya, where Avidya is knowledge of the material world and Vidya is knowing the essential, non-material truth. He explains that all human desires are ultimately a search for the ultimate truth and peace, which is the absence of mental disturbance. He emphasizes that faith is an innate quality that is often obscured by taught skepticism and that the path to liberation involves recognizing the falseness of one's dependencies and conditioning. He also notes that Shri Krishna refers to Maya as His own, suggesting that while the mind is immortal in its continuity, the goal is to reach the transcendental center that never moves.