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Latest revision as of 19:39, 22 May 2026
| Discordianism | |
|---|---|
| Family | Modern / Parody and philosophical religion |
| Origin region | United States |
| Founding period | 20th century CE |
| Estimated adherents | Unknown; often practiced playfully, philosophically, or internet-culturally rather than through formal membership. |
Discordianism is a modern religious, philosophical, and satirical movement centered on Eris, chaos, humor, paradox, and the questioning of rigid systems of order.
Overview
[edit | edit source]Discordianism developed around the text Principia Discordia and is often described as a parody religion, a real religion disguised as a joke, or a joke disguised as a religion. It uses myth, absurdity, play, and paradox to challenge dogmatism and expose the ways humans impose order on chaotic reality.
Key beliefs
[edit | edit source]- Eris as a symbolic or mythic figure of chaos and discord
- Suspicion toward rigid authority, certainty, and excessive order
- Humor, paradox, and play as spiritual or philosophical tools
- The idea that chaos and order are both interpretive lenses
- Anti-dogmatism and creative irreverence
Practices
[edit | edit source]- Reading or remixing Discordian texts
- Creative ritual, jokes, pranks, and symbolic actions
- Use of the number five and other Discordian motifs
- Internet and countercultural participation
- Playful self-initiation and invented titles
Places of worship
[edit | edit source]- No required temples; Discordian practice often occurs online, in homes, at gatherings, or wherever participants create meaning
Sacred texts
[edit | edit source]- Principia Discordia is the central text, along with later writings, jokes, and community-created materials
Holidays and observances
[edit | edit source]- Discordian calendars include playful observances and invented holy days, varying by community and text