Nasreddin's stories embrace logical contradictions without resolution, teaching Buddhist ecology to dwell in paradox rather than demand ideological purity.
Nasreddin simultaneously acts and acts not, is wise and foolish, succeeds through failure. Buddhist ecology, inheriting his tradition, must embrace the paradoxes that paralyze ideological thinking: we must preserve wild nature while acknowledging all preservation is human intervention; we must act urgently while accepting our solutions will be imperfect; we must love the land while recognizing we are part of the problem. The examined joyful life means feasting on these contradictions rather than starving ourselves through insistence on purity. Industrial culture demands consistency—predictable products, logical chains of causation, clear narratives of progress. Nature, by contrast, thrives in paradox: cooperation and competition, stability and change, individual and collective. Nasreddin's tradition teaches us to relax into these tensions, to develop the cognitive flexibility that nature requires. We become practitioners of both/and thinking rather than either/or dogmatism. This liberates us from the paralysis of seeking perfect solutions and allows us to move skillfully within actual complexity. Buddhist ecology becomes a feast precisely because we stop demanding the meal be logically consistent.
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