Acharya Prashant distinguishes between the material and spiritual domains regarding ownership and sharing. In the material world, objects like televisions or money are often part of a zero-sum game where one person's possession does not necessarily depend on or affect another's. However, the spiritual domain operates differently because its primary objective is the dissolution of the neurotic and self-defeating sense of the self. While worldly goals involve acquiring things for the self, spiritual practice aims to get rid of the self entirely and reduce the feeling of otherness. He explains that accumulating spiritual knowledge solely for oneself is a sign of failure. True spiritual insight reveals that the self which seeks to hoard knowledge is the very cause of suffering. If one claims to have knowledge but refuses to share it, that knowledge is superficial or false. Real spiritual knowledge inherently radiates from the individual to others because it exposes the boundary between the self and the world as an unreal and tormenting illusion. When someone truly understands that this boundary is false, they cannot help but let the knowledge proceed to others. The tendency to withhold information stems from the fundamental illusion of individuality and the belief that one is a unique, separate person. While physical experiences like pain or hunger may seem to support this sense of separation, deeper observation reveals a fundamental sameness among all beings. Acharya Prashant asserts that anything truly worth having is too vast to be possessed or limited to a single person. If something can be possessed and kept private, it is ultimately worthless. Genuine truth is so expansive that it compels the individual to express and spread it naturally.