Absolute certainty in claims—whether true or false—fuels polarization; Taoist epistemology values holding truth and doubt in dynamic balance.
The Tao Te Ching embodies paradox: statements are immediately qualified, certainties are suspended. Disinformation thrives on false certainty and exploits true certainty; both create rigidity and resistance to updating. The Taoist approach to epistemology suggests that knowledge exists in tension between assertion and doubt. Cultivated uncertainty—not from weakness but from wisdom—protects against manipulation. Technology designed around this principle shows confidence bands, uncertainty ranges, and expert disagreement rather than false consensus. It labels provisional knowledge differently from established knowledge. It makes room for 'we don't know yet' without treating it as weakness. This requires cultural shift: media and platforms that model epistemic humility become more trustworthy because they acknowledge reality's complexity. When institutions admit what they don't know and update when evidence shifts, populations become more skeptical of false certainty from propagandists. The paradox: asserting confidence only where warranted, and broadcasting doubt honestly, actually strengthens belief in legitimate claims because they're embedded in a framework that respects truth-seeking over truth-claiming.
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