Nasreddin's use of humor to expose collective delusions about nature's limits and human exceptionalism, essential for understanding extinction denial.
The Hodja's stories work through humor that initially seems absurd but reveals hidden truths about human nature and society. In the extinction context, this becomes a powerful tool for exposing the collective blindness that allows species loss to continue unchecked. Nasreddin asks the obvious questions that clever society ignores: why do we drain the river while claiming to need water? Why do we destroy the forest while needing its shade? His humor operates as a mirror—what appears ridiculous in the story reflects the actual absurdity of our ecological choices. The examined joyful life embraces this comic perspective not as cynicism but as clarity. When we laugh at the Hodja being thrown from a bridge because he swims, we recognize ourselves dismissing warnings about ecosystem collapse. This concept transforms humor from entertainment into a philosophical practice that cuts through rationalization and denial, making extinction-awareness both intellectually accessible and emotionally bearable.
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