Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Paradox as Lived Practice

The cultivation of comfort with contradiction and paradox through playful engagement, as opposed to the adult demand for consistency and resolution.

Nas
Why It Matters

Nasreddin Hodja's stories frequently contain logical paradoxes, contradictions, and absurdities that resist neat resolution. Rather than frustrating, these become vehicles for wisdom—they teach us to hold opposing truths simultaneously, to recognize that reality exceeds our categories. Modern adult cognition demands consistency: choose a position and defend it, resolve contradictions, eliminate ambiguity. This produces a kind of mental brittleness. Play, by contrast, naturally inhabits paradox—a game has arbitrary rules that are simultaneously binding and optional; a joke relies on holding two incompatible meanings; imagination holds fictional and actual simultaneously. By abandoning adult play, we've lost the cognitive practice of comfortable paradox-holding. This makes us less able to tolerate genuine complexity, to understand systems with multiple valid perspectives, to hold ourselves with humor when we're caught in contradiction. Reclaiming adult play means practicing comfort with paradox as lived experience, not abstract philosophy. When adults play, they're naturally tolerating multiple simultaneous truths: this game matters and doesn't matter; I'm this character and also myself; this is pretend and also real. This flexibility transfers to all domains of life, making us more creative, more empathetic, and more able to navigate genuine complexity without collapse.

Helpful guides
Nas
Play & Joy
Peri
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