A spiritual practice of relating to animals through acknowledgment of mutual mystery rather than claims to understanding, creating ethical bonds based on shared existence rather than knowledge.
The Hodja's wisdom often leaves questions unanswered, comfortable with paradox and mystery. Applied to animals, this means honoring the fundamental foreignness of animal consciousness while still relating ethically. We cannot truly know what it's like to be a bat, a snake, or a dolphin. Rather than this gap being a problem to solve, it becomes the basis of genuine relationship. When we stop pretending we understand animal minds and instead acknowledge the shared mystery of consciousness itself, we find unexpected communion. This isn't sentimentality but rigorous honesty: the more we study animal cognition, the more strange and unlike human thinking it becomes. The Communion of Unknowing invites ethical behavior precisely because we don't know—because the animal remains other, autonomous, and inexplicable. This humility before mystery is more ethically robust than claims of understanding, because it doesn't allow us to rationalize using what we've decided we've comprehended.
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