Posing precise, seemingly naive questions that undermine confident assertions about animal use, revealing hidden assumptions beneath supposedly settled ethical positions.
Hodja's most devastating wisdom often comes through simple questions that seem innocent but expose logical gaps. "If the animal doesn't wish to die, who are we to decide otherwise?" "Why is the suffering of a dog more real to us than the suffering of a pig?" "What natural law requires herbivores to become carnivores on our plates?" These questions don't argue; they ask. They invite examination rather than provoking defensiveness. In examining our ethical relationship with animals, this questioning method proves more effective than moral pronouncement. When someone asks themselves "Why do I believe this animal doesn't matter?" they must confront their own reasoning rather than reject external judgment. This Socratic approach, embodied in Hodja's tradition, creates intellectual and emotional space for genuine change. The questions linger, working beneath conscious thought, gradually dissolving the unexamined certainties that justify harm.
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