Why this word is great
INDOCILITY — [Noun] The quality of being unteachable or resistant to instruction. From Latin indocilitas, from indocilis ("unteachable"), combining in- ("not") + docilis ("teachable"), with the suffix -ity forming a noun of quality. Unlike "obstinacy" (a broad refusal to yield) or "recalcitrance" (defiant rebellion), indocility is the quiet, almost inertial refusal to be shaped—not out of malice, but an innate resistance to imprint. It is the child who stares blankly at the chalkboard, absorbing nothing; the horse that balks at every command yet shows no anger; the way certain clay simply will not hold the potter’s form. Some things cannot be taught, not because they reject the teacher, but because they are already complete in their own unyielding nature.