Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Question of Resemblance

Examining what we project onto animals versus what they actually are, revealing assumptions about consciousness and kinship.

Nas
Why It Matters

One of Hodja's most profound questions is often implicit: how do we know what we think we know? When we claim to understand our companion animal's feelings, motivations, or preferences, what evidence supports this? Hodja's tradition doesn't demand we stop caring or attributing inner life to animals. Rather, it asks us to hold our interpretations lightly while acknowledging uncertainty. We see our animals as resembling ourselves because resemblance is how we connect. Yet this very resemblance may be projection. A dog's enthusiasm might express joy or simply arousal; a cat's independence might indicate self-sufficiency or indifference to human needs. This uncertainty need not diminish relationship—it can deepen it. By examining the gap between what animals actually are and what we imagine them to be, we practice intellectual humility. We learn to observe more carefully, question our assumptions, and remain in the productive tension between kinship and otherness. This paradoxical stance honors both our genuine connection and animals' unknowable interior reality.

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