Taoist philosophy sees time as cyclical; algorithms treating political time as linear mistake perpetual novelty for progress, missing historical pattern recognition.
The Tao Te Ching depicts natural cycles: seasons return, empires rise and fall in patterns. Western algorithmic politics treats time as an arrow—always moving forward toward more data, newer content, fresh outrage. This linear assumption creates the illusion of constant progress while making citizens vulnerable to historical repetition. A cyclical understanding reveals that many current political conflicts are not novel crises but recurring patterns: nationalism, resource competition, identity assertion. Algorithms designed around cyclical time would recognize these patterns, enabling citizens to learn from history rather than endlessly recreate it. This means recommending classical texts alongside current news, showing how present conflicts echo past ones, creating historical perspective. Linear-time algorithms make each crisis feel unprecedented and demanding, activating panic. Cyclical-time algorithms contextualize crisis, enabling measured response. Additionally, cyclical thinking acknowledges that intense periods must alternate with fallow ones—seasons of political activity and seasons of rest. Current systems reject this natural rhythm, demanding constant engagement. A wiser algorithm would respect the need for political winters, times when less happens and that is not failure but necessity.
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