Why is Zen paradoxical?
Synthesized from Source
definition
"Zen is paradoxical because it reflects the entirety of life, where opposites coexist and truth reveals itself in contradictions. Embrace choiceless awareness, and you will see that beauty and ugliness, love and hate, are all part of the same whole."
According to Osho, Zen is paradoxical because life itself is paradoxical, and Zen simply mirrors life rather than constructing a tidy philosophy. Philosophies are man-made, selective, and logical; Zen refuses choice and reflects the whole as-it-is. Embracing choiceless awareness reveals that opposites coexist—beauty with ugliness, love with hate—so truth appears contradictory yet complete.
Zen looks at everything without picking sides, so it shows opposites together—just like real life.
Why this matters practically
- Helps you accept people and situations without illusions.
- Reduces conflict by seeing both sides of emotions and events.
- Cultivates clear, choiceless awareness for wiser action.
- Reduces conflict by seeing both sides of emotions and events.
- Cultivates clear, choiceless awareness for wiser action.
AI Confidence Score: 97%
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