Using logical contradictions and impossible situations to generate humor while simultaneously questioning fundamental assumptions.
Nasreddin's tales thrive on paradox: seeking truth by pretending to search for lost keys under a streetlamp, or riding his donkey backwards to confuse pursuers. These aren't absurdities for their own sake—they're engines that expose the arbitrary nature of our logical systems. Paradox appears across comedy traditions: Zen koans in Japanese humor, Irish absurdist playwrights, Jewish dialectical humor, and West African trickster tales all weaponize contradiction to destabilize certainty. When an audience laughs at an irresolvable paradox, they experience the limits of reason itself. This transforms comedy from joke-telling into genuine philosophical inquiry. The humor emerges not from setup-punchline mechanics but from the collision between what we expect the world to be and what it actually is. By embracing rather than resolving contradictions, comedy traditions across cultures use laughter as a gateway to deeper understanding and intellectual humility.
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.