Understanding natural processes as simultaneously readable patterns and lived environments that constitute spiritual experience.
The Hodja exists within his world fully—he doesn't merely observe; he participates, fumbles, learns through embodied experience. Scientific naturalism traditionally emphasizes reading nature as objective text: discovering laws, understanding mechanisms. This dichotomy between observer and observed creates distance. This concept proposes that nature functions as both legible system and lived habitat. You can understand atmospheric circulation patterns while feeling wind; comprehend cellular respiration while tasting food; grasp evolutionary adaptation while experiencing your body's capabilities. The Hodja's stories occur in specific, sensory places: streets, rivers, gardens. Scientific naturalism as spirituality requires similar grounding: moving from abstract understanding to embodied participation in natural processes. This means becoming a naturalist in the original sense—an observer who observes through presence and participation. When we inhabit nature rather than merely studying it, when we read it through our senses while comprehending it through our minds, spirituality emerges naturally from this integrated engagement.
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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