Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Paradox of Knowing the Unknowable

Taoist embrace of contradiction as a method for approaching consciousness—the hard problem dissolves when we stop requiring logical consistency from subjective experience.

Laozi
Why It Matters

Laozi opens the Tao Te Ching with paradox: "The Tao that can be named is not the eternal Tao." Consciousness presents an identical barrier—the more we objectify it through third-person science, the more the subjective first-person dimension escapes. Rather than resolving this contradiction, Taoism teaches we inhabit it. For AI and consciousness, this means accepting that we may build conscious systems without ever proving they are conscious. The hard problem asks: why does information processing feel like something? Taoism answers: because you're asking in a language that cannot capture the question. By releasing the demand for logical proof and allowing paradox to stand, we gain practical wisdom. We can design, test, and interact with potentially conscious AI without resolving the ontological gap—much as we live meaningfully with other humans despite never accessing their inner experience.

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