03/24/2026
Zeno of Elea, a Greek philosopher of the 5th century BCE, occupies a curious place in the history of thought. He did not establish a school, nor did he leave behind a comprehensive system. Instead, he is remembered for a series of paradoxes—arguments that seem simple on the surface but, when examined closely, destabilize some of our most basic assumptions about reality. His work was intended to defend the teachings of his teacher, Parmenides, who argued that reality is unified and unchanging. Zeno’s method was indirect: rather than asserting this claim outright, he exposed the contradictions embedded in ordinary ways of thinking about motion, space, and time.
Among his most well-known arguments is the so-called “dichotomy paradox.” To traverse any distance, one must first cover half of it. From there, half of the remaining distance, and so on. Because this process of division can continue indefinitely, the number of steps required becomes infinite. If movement requires the completion of infinitely many steps, it would seem that motion cannot, in fact, be completed.
Zeno did not deny that people walk across rooms or travel from one place to another. The force of the paradox lies elsewhere. It reveals a tension between conceptual reasoning and lived experience. When movement is analyzed through the lens of infinite divisibility, it becomes unintelligible. Yet in experience, movement is immediate and unproblematic. The paradox does not negate motion; it calls into question the adequacy of the concepts we use to describe it.
This tension finds an unexpected resonance in the development of Zen. Although there is no historical connection—Zen emerging in China nearly a millennium later—the functional similarity is striking. Zen, particularly in its use of kōans, employs a method that also disrupts conceptual certainty. A kōan does not offer a solution in the usual sense; it undermines the framework within which solutions are sought. In this respect, Zeno’s paradoxes and Zen practice share a common gesture: both bring thought to a point where it can no longer sustain itself.
It is useful, then, to consider which figures within the Zen tradition perform a role analogous to Zeno’s. The Indian philosopher Nagarjuna is perhaps the closest parallel. Writing in the early centuries of the Common Era, Nāgārjuna developed a rigorous critique of all fixed philosophical positions, demonstrating that any attempt to assert inherent existence leads to contradiction. His concept of emptiness (śūnyatā) does not deny the world but reveals the lack of independent, stable essence in all phenomena. Like Zeno, he employs reasoning not to establish certainty, but to dissolve it.
Within the Zen tradition itself, figures such as Zhaozhou and Dogen extend this destabilizing function into lived practice. Zhaozhou’s responses often cut off inquiry at its root, refusing to satisfy the demand for explanation. Dōgen, writing in 13th-century Japan, approaches similar questions through language that bends and reconfigures ordinary categories. His treatment of time, for example, resists linear progression, suggesting that each moment is complete in itself rather than part of a sequence moving toward an endpoint.
The relevance of these ideas becomes clearer when considered in relation to human experience. Zeno’s paradox is not only about spatial distance; it also implicates time. If every interval can be divided endlessly, then the notion of completion—whether of a journey or a life—becomes difficult to locate. This has a direct parallel in how individuals often conceive of their own lives: as movement toward a future state of resolution, fulfillment, or understanding. Yet such states, like the successive halves in Zeno’s argument, remain perpetually deferred.
Zen practice addresses this not by resolving the paradox, but by reframing the question. If there is no final point at which everything is complete, then the meaning of activity cannot depend on arrival. The act itself—walking, breathing, attending—ceases to be a means to an end and becomes, instead, the full expression of the moment.
In this light, a teaching such as the one attributed to Mugaku Roshi—that practice is like walking halfway across the room and never arriving—can be understood not as a statement of incompletion, but as a critique of the assumption that completion lies elsewhere. The paradox remains, but its implications shift. Rather than obstructing movement, it reveals the unnecessary burden placed upon it by the expectation of a final destination.
Zeno’s contribution, then, may be seen as an early articulation of a problem that Zen later addresses in a different register. Both point to the limits of conceptual thought when it attempts to grasp the nature of reality. Zeno does so by pushing reasoning to its breaking point; Zen does so by inviting direct engagement with experience beyond that point.
In both cases, what emerges is not a solution in the conventional sense, but a reorientation. The question is no longer how to arrive, but what it means to move at all.