According to Balthazar's Philosophy, the Paradoxical Tenet is the fundamental principle of embracing the absurdity within. It states that all things are equal, yet simultaneously, utterly incomparable.
For instance, consider the paradox of the chicken and the egg. Is it the chicken that lays the egg, or is it the egg that lays the chicken? The answer, of course, is both, yet neither. It's a paradoxical conundrum that has plagued philosophers for centuries.
But Balthazar's Tenet takes it a step further. It says that not only are the chicken and the egg paradoxical, but so are the paradoxical and the non-paradoxical. In other words, the statement "this is a paradox" is itself a paradox.
And so, we arrive at the ultimate paradox: the paradoxical tenet of the absurd. It's a logic-buster that defies all logic and reason. It's the ultimate expression of Balthazar's Philosophy's core tenet: the more you try to understand it, the less you'll understand it.