Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Laughter as Ethical Awakening

A practice using humor and absurdity to create emotional and cognitive shifts that make ethical transformation possible.

Nas
Why It Matters

Hodja's stories make readers laugh, often at moments when discomfort should be highest. This laughter isn't evasion but transformation: humor creates psychological space where defenses lower and new understanding becomes possible. Applied to animal ethics, this concept recognizes that guilt, shame, and defensiveness prevent ethical change. Many people eat meat while believing animal suffering is wrong; the cognitive dissonance is painful, so we avoid examining it. Hodja's tradition suggests humor can crack this sealed space. A playful story about humans being farmed might provoke laughter that briefly dissolves our resistance, allowing genuine recognition of contradiction. This is different from mocking animal rights; rather, it's using absurdist humor to illuminate how our current practices contradict our values. The examined joyful life isn't grim—ethical awakening can include lightness, laughter, and play. In fact, the joyfulness might be essential: if ethics requires constant suffering and self-flagellation, few sustain it. Hodja teaches that wisdom, humor, and joy can coexist with serious ethical commitment, and that laughter sometimes reaches where arguments cannot.

Helpful guides
Nas
Play & Joy
Peri
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