Understanding that patterns repeat at different scales—seasons, generations, technologies—revealing recurring futures worth anticipating.
Taoist cosmology operates in cycles: yin and yang, seasons, day and night, rise and fall. This cyclical view of time differs fundamentally from linear progress assumptions. Laozi taught that what appears new often recurs in different form; patterns spiral rather than advance in straight lines. Applied to anticipation, cyclical thinking reveals that certain futures are inevitable returns: after periods of expansion comes contraction; extreme visibility precedes invisibility; rapid acceleration precedes plateaus. This lets us anticipate not by extrapolating trends but by recognizing where we are in the cycle. Technology follows this pattern—enthusiasm peaks, valleys appear, then new cycles begin. Relationships, industries, and cultures all move through recognizable phases. By studying historical cycles and current position within them, we anticipate futures with greater accuracy than linear forecasting. The Taoist sage expects return and renewal, positioning for seasonal shifts rather than assuming permanent transformation.
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