The seeking is the ignorance itself. LoL.
I'm not sure that identifying the state of active search with the state of ignorance is logically correct.
Although it would surely be correct to say that sometimes there is a cause-effect relationship between seeking and ignorance, so the twain are linked. Even though absolute ignorance sometimes finds no need of seeking truth.
I would say that seeking, in any form, is nothing but the ignorance of a craving mind. A person may be seeking truth instead of money, and this desire may eventually eat itself, but it is still the thorn of desire for something yet to come. A lot of people surely have no interest in spiritual topics or capital 'T' truth but you'll find that they are looking for something in love, money, sex, or some other avenue. Quite simply, those who are truly not seeking anything find Samadhi is already there. It seems to rest underneath all of our desires and mental impressions, like a substratum.
What I 👀 here is people who claim they r not seeking and do not need to seek. However all day they r involved in endless seeking of distractions to alleviate boredom and satisfy desires. There r various riches all around us yet if we make no effort to find them we will not have or percieve them. There r various riches inside us all that r part of our true nature. Unless we make an effort to cultivate the consciousness of them they will never b percieved. To get into an endless tug of war of semantics is futile. Call it seeking, discovery, uncovering..call it what u will. But to dispute the semantics of what word we use is a rather futile distraction. Until we are aware of something we have been told is part of our true nature what r we doing or not doing to b aware of it?
Sometimes the endless debates that surround various words and ideas gives more of a barometer of the degree of the mental obstacles people have in their spiritual life rather then an appreciation for spiritual insight. Until he is 'that' ; something is happening. Let us not squabble and b obsessed about one word that may or may not describe it as well as another word. This is like not seeing the forest through the trees.