A willingness to hold animal ethics contradictions without resolving them, allowing genuine moral development through accepting complexity.
Hodja's teaching often leaves people confused because he embraces contradictions rather than resolving them. Most of us want coherent ethical systems: be vegetarian or omnivore, prioritize animal welfare or human flourishing, preserve nature or feed humanity. But actual ethical life is messier. A farmer genuinely cares for her animals and also slaughters them. Predators kill prey. Humans require nutrients from ecosystems populated by beings with intrinsic worth. Rather than hiding these contradictions behind ideology, Hodja invites us to live inside them, uncomfortable and aware. This actually produces more ethical behavior than clean systems do. When you acknowledge the real contradiction in eating meat—that genuine animal suffering is involved—you might treat the animals' lives with more respect, reduce consumption, improve conditions, or make a deliberate choice with eyes open. The examined joyful life doesn't require perfect consistency; it requires awareness. By holding contradictions consciously, we remain humble about our relationship with nature and less likely to become dogmatic or cruel in service to abstract principle.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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