Discordianism: Difference between revisions
Appearance
m 1 revision imported: Initial Wikitheism seed import |
m 1 revision imported: Initial Wikitheism seed import |
(No difference)
| |
Revision as of 19:31, 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
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
- 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
- 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
- No required temples; Discordian practice often occurs online, in homes, at gatherings, or wherever participants create meaning
Sacred texts
- Principia Discordia is the central text, along with later writings, jokes, and community-created materials
Holidays and observances
- Discordian calendars include playful observances and invented holy days, varying by community and text