Periagoge
Concept
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Profitable Foolishness as Spiritual Practice

The paradoxical act of seeming foolish to gain hidden wisdom and reveal society's unexamined assumptions.

Nas
Why It Matters

Nasreddin Hodja often appears foolish—selling his donkey for more than its worth, searching for his keys under a lamp he knows they weren't lost under, or giving nonsensical advice that somehow solves problems. In The Sufi tradition of humor, this performed foolishness is not stupidity but strategic pedagogy. The Hodja profits spiritually by disrupting the listener's logical expectations, forcing a moment of cognitive dissonance where real learning occurs. When he gives advice that defies reason yet works, he demonstrates that conventional wisdom may be the greatest obstacle to truth. This practice invites practitioners to question their own certainty, to see where they cling to false logic, and to recognize that the universe operates according to principles beyond rational analysis. By embracing apparent foolishness, we expose the arbitrary nature of social hierarchies and become free to access wisdom that logic alone cannot reach.

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The Examined Path Through The Sufi tradition of humor
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