Recognizing the limits of human understanding regarding animal consciousness and experience, resisting the urge to fully know or control what remains unknowable.
The Hodja knows less than he claims and claims to understand things that remain genuinely mysterious. This stance of intellectual humility proves essential for animal ethics. We cannot fully know what it is to be a bat, a bee, an elephant. Yet we often act as though we understand animals completely—confident we know what they feel, what they need, how they should live. This confidence justifies our interventions. The Hodja teaches that wisdom begins with acknowledging what we cannot know. When we approach animals with genuine uncertainty about their inner lives, we become cautious about imposing our will. Humility doesn't paralyze action; rather, it grounds ethical choices in respect for mystery rather than false certainty. We can protect creatures and systems we don't fully understand, simply because that unknowability itself commands our restraint.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.