Using purposeful confusion and paradox to dismantle the human illusion of dominion over nature and animals.
The Hodja deliberately acts foolishly to reveal deeper truths—a method applicable to animal ethics where conventional human wisdom often masks exploitation. Sacred confusion means intentionally questioning our most basic assumptions: Why do we call ourselves stewards while destroying habitats? Why do we grieve individual pets while funding industrial animal agriculture? This concept invites practitioners into the productive discomfort of holding contradictions without rushing to resolve them. Nature itself operates in paradox—predator and prey, growth and decay, individual and ecosystem. By embracing confusion rather than seeking false clarity, we align with how animals actually live: pragmatic, responsive, without human moral frameworks. The Hodja's method suggests that clarity about animal ethics emerges not from logical arguments but from dwelling in questions, observing our own inconsistencies with humor and humility, and allowing uncertainty to reshape our relationships with creatures we encounter.
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